International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2021)

Detecting Variants in the NBN Gene While Testing for Hereditary Breast Cancer: What to Do Next?

  • Roberta Zuntini,
  • Elena Bonora,
  • Laura Maria Pradella,
  • Laura Benedetta Amato,
  • Michele Vidone,
  • Sara De Fanti,
  • Irene Catucci,
  • Laura Cortesi,
  • Veronica Medici,
  • Simona Ferrari,
  • Giuseppe Gasparre,
  • Paolo Peterlongo,
  • Marco Sazzini,
  • Daniela Turchetti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22115832
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 11
p. 5832

Abstract

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The NBN gene has been included in breast cancer (BC) multigene panels based on early studies suggesting an increased BC risk for carriers, though not confirmed by recent research. To evaluate the impact of NBN analysis, we assessed the results of NBN sequencing in 116 BRCA-negative BC patients and reviewed the literature. Three patients (2.6%) carried potentially relevant variants: two, apparently unrelated, carried the frameshift variant c.156_157delTT and another one the c.628G>T variant. The latter was subsequently found in 4/1390 (0.3%) BC cases and 8/1580 (0.5%) controls in an independent sample, which, together with in silico predictions, provided evidence against its pathogenicity. Conversely, the rare c.156_157delTT variant was absent in the case-control set; moreover, a 50% reduction of NBN expression was demonstrated in one carrier. However, in one family it failed to co-segregate with BC, while the other carrier was found to harbor also a probably pathogenic TP53 variant that may explain her phenotype. Therefore, the c.156_157delTT, although functionally deleterious, was not supported as a cancer-predisposing defect. Pathogenic/likely pathogenic NBN variants were detected by multigene panels in 31/12314 (0.25%) patients included in 15 studies. The risk of misinterpretation of such findings is substantial and supports the exclusion of NBN from multigene panels.

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