Genes (Jul 2023)

Impact of High-to-Moderate Penetrance Genes on Genetic Testing: Looking over Breast Cancer

  • Antonella Turchiano,
  • Marilidia Piglionica,
  • Stefania Martino,
  • Rosanna Bagnulo,
  • Antonella Garganese,
  • Annunziata De Luisi,
  • Stefania Chirulli,
  • Matteo Iacoviello,
  • Michele Stasi,
  • Ornella Tabaku,
  • Eleonora Meneleo,
  • Martina Capurso,
  • Silvia Crocetta,
  • Simone Lattarulo,
  • Yevheniia Krylovska,
  • Patrizia Lastella,
  • Cinzia Forleo,
  • Alessandro Stella,
  • Nenad Bukvic,
  • Cristiano Simone,
  • Nicoletta Resta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes14081530
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 1530

Abstract

Read online

Breast cancer (BC) is the most common cancer and the leading cause of cancer death in women worldwide. Since the discovery of the highly penetrant susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2, many other predisposition genes that confer a moderate risk of BC have been identified. Advances in multigene panel testing have allowed the simultaneous sequencing of BRCA1/2 with these genes in a cost-effective way. Germline DNA from 521 cases with BC fulfilling diagnostic criteria for hereditary BC were screened with multigene NGS testing. Pathogenic (PVs) and likely pathogenic (LPVs) variants in moderate penetrance genes were identified in 15 out of 521 patients (2.9%), including 2 missense, 7 non-sense, 1 indel, and 3 splice variants, as well as two different exon deletions, as follows: ATM (n = 4), CHEK2 (n = 5), PALB2 (n = 2), RAD51C (n = 1), and RAD51D (n = 3). Moreover, the segregation analysis of PVs and LPVs into first-degree relatives allowed the detection of CHEK2 variant carriers diagnosed with in situ melanoma and clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), respectively. Extended testing beyond BRCA1/2 identified PVs and LPVs in a further 2.9% of BC patients. In conclusion, panel testing yields more accurate genetic information for appropriate counselling, risk management, and preventive options than assessing BRCA1/2 alone.

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