Diagnostics (Mar 2021)

The Prognostic and Predictive Role of Somatic <i>BRCA</i> Mutations in Ovarian Cancer: Results from a Multicenter Cohort Study

  • Angela Toss,
  • Claudia Piombino,
  • Elena Tenedini,
  • Alessandra Bologna,
  • Elisa Gasparini,
  • Vittoria Tarantino,
  • Maria Elisabetta Filieri,
  • Luca Cottafavi,
  • Filippo Giovanardi,
  • Stefano Madrigali,
  • Monica Civallero,
  • Luigi Marcheselli,
  • Isabella Marchi,
  • Federica Domati,
  • Marta Venturelli,
  • Elena Barbieri,
  • Giovanni Grandi,
  • Enrico Tagliafico,
  • Laura Cortesi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11030565
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 565

Abstract

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Previous research involving epithelial ovarian cancer patients showed that, compared to germline BRCA (gBRCA) mutations, somatic BRCA (sBRCA) mutations present a similar positive impact with regard to overall survival (OS) and platinum and PARP (poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase) inhibitor sensitivity. Nevertheless, molecular testing in these studies did not include copy number variation (CNV) analyses of BRCA genes. The aim of this study was to explore the prognostic and predictive role of sBRCA mutations as compared to gBRCA mutations in patients who were also tested for CNVs. Among the 158 patients included in the study, 17.09% of patients carried a pathogenic or likely pathogenic gBRCA variant and 15.19% of patients presented pathogenetic or likely pathogenic sBRCA variants and/or CNVs. Overall, 81.6% of the patients included in this study were diagnosed with a serous histotype, and 77.2% were in advanced stages. Among women diagnosed in advanced stages, gBRCA patients showed better progression-free survival and OS as compared to sBRCA and wild-type patients, whereas sBRCA patients did not show any advantage in outcome as compared to wild-type patients. In this study, the introduction of CNV analyses increased the detection rate of sBRCA mutations, and the resulting classification among gBRCA, sBRCA and wild-type patients was able to properly stratify the prognosis of OC patients. Particularly, sBRCA mutation patients failed to show any outcome advantage as compared to wild-type patients.

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