International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2023)

The <i>CFTR</i> Gene Germline Heterozygous Pathogenic Variants in Russian Patients with Malignant Neoplasms and Healthy Carriers: 11,800 WGS Results

  • Maria Makarova,
  • Marina Nemtsova,
  • Anastasiia Danishevich,
  • Denis Chernevskiy,
  • Maxim Belenikin,
  • Anastasiia Krinitsina,
  • Elena Baranova,
  • Olesya Sagaydak,
  • Maria Vorontsova,
  • Igor Khatkov,
  • Lyudmila Zhukova,
  • Natalia Bodunova,
  • Sergey Nikolaev,
  • Mariya Byakhova,
  • Anna Semenova,
  • Vsevolod Galkin,
  • Saida Gadzhieva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24097940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 9
p. 7940

Abstract

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More than 275 million people in the world are carriers of a heterozygous mutation of the CFTR gene, associated with cystic fibrosis, the most common autosomal recessive disease among Caucasians. Some recent studies assessed the association between carriers of CFTR variants and some pathologies, including cancer risk. The aim of this study is to analyze the landscape of germline pathogenic heterozygous CFTR variants in patients with diagnosed malignant neoplasms. For the first time in Russia, we evaluated the frequency of CFTR pathogenic variants by whole-genome sequencing in 1800 patients with cancer and compared this with frequencies of CFTR variants in the control group (1825 people) adjusted for age and 10,000 healthy individuals. In the issue, 47 out of 1800 patients (2.6%) were carriers of CFTR pathogenic genetic variants: 0.028 (42/1525) (2.8%) among breast cancer patients, 0.017 (3/181) (1.7%) among colorectal cancer patients and 0.021 (2/94) (2.1%) among ovarian cancer patients. Pathogenic CFTR variants were found in 52/1825 cases (2.85%) in the control group and 221 (2.21%) in 10,000 healthy individuals. Based on the results of the comparison, there was no significant difference in the frequency and distribution of pathogenic variants of the CFTR gene, which is probably due to the study limitations. Obviously, additional studies are needed to assess the clinical significance of the heterozygous carriage of CFTR pathogenic variants in the development of various pathologies in the future, particularly cancer.

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