Cancers (Dec 2023)

Novel Pathogenic Variants in Hereditary Cancer Syndromes in a Highly Heterogeneous Cohort of Patients: Insights from Multigene Analysis

  • Airat Bilyalov,
  • Anastasiia Danishevich,
  • Sergey Nikolaev,
  • Nikita Vorobyov,
  • Ivan Abramov,
  • Ekaterina Pismennaya,
  • Svetlana Terehova,
  • Yuliya Kosilova,
  • Anastasiia Primak,
  • Uglesha Stanoevich,
  • Tatyana Lisica,
  • German Shipulin,
  • Sergey Gamayunov,
  • Elena Kolesnikova,
  • Igor Khatkov,
  • Oleg Gusev,
  • Natalia Bodunova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16010085
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
p. 85

Abstract

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Cancer is a major global public health challenge, affecting both quality of life and mortality. Recent advances in genetic research have uncovered hereditary cancer syndromes (HCS) that predispose individuals to malignant neoplasms. While traditional single-gene testing has focused on high-penetrance genes, the past decade has seen a shift toward multigene panels, which facilitate the analysis of multiple genes associated with specific HCS. This approach reveals variants in less-studied gene regions and improves our understanding of cancer predisposition. In a study composed of Russian patients with clinical signs of HCS, we used a multigene hereditary cancer panel and revealed 21.6% individuals with pathogenic or likely pathogenic genetic variants. BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations predominated, followed by the CHEK2 and ATM variants. Of note, 16 previously undescribed variants were identified in the MUTYH, GALNT12, MSH2, MLH1, MLH3, EPCAM, and POLE genes. The implications of the study extend to personalized cancer prevention and treatment strategies, especially in populations lacking extensive epidemiological data, such as Russia. Overall, our research provides valuable genetic insights that give the way for further investigation and advances in the understanding and management of hereditary cancer syndromes.

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