BMJ Open (May 2023)

Protocol for a comprehensive prospective cohort study of trio-based whole-genome sequencing for underlying cancer predisposition in paediatric and adolescent patients newly diagnosed with cancer: the PREDICT study

  • Yuyan Chen,
  • Mark Pinese,
  • Claire Wakefield,
  • Frank Alvaro,
  • Katherine Tucker,
  • Tracey A O’Brien,
  • Vanessa J Tyrrell,
  • Judy Kirk,
  • Kate Hetherington,
  • Eliza Courtney,
  • Kristine Barlow-Stewart,
  • Noemi Auxiliadora Fuentes Bolanos,
  • Bhavna Padhye,
  • Macabe Daley,
  • Jacqueline Hunter,
  • Meera Warby,
  • Sarah Josephi-Taylor,
  • Marie Wong-Erasmus,
  • Paulette Barahona,
  • Pamela Ajuyah,
  • Ann-Kristin Altekoester,
  • Loretta M S Lau,
  • Dianne Sylvester,
  • Luciano Dalla Pozza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070082
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5

Abstract

Read online

Introduction Identifying an underlying germline cancer predisposition (CP) in a child with cancer has potentially significant implications for both the child and biological relatives. Cohort studies indicate that 10%–15% of paediatric cancer patients carry germline pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in cancer predisposition genes, but many of these patients do not meet current clinical criteria for genetic testing. This suggests broad tumour agnostic germline testing may benefit paediatric cancer patients. However, the utility and psychosocial impact of this approach remain unknown. We hypothesise that an approach involving trio whole-genome germline sequencing (trio WGS) will identify children and families with an underlying CP in a timely fashion, that the trio design will streamline cancer risk counselling to at-risk relatives if CP was inherited, and that trio testing will not have a negative psychosocial impact on families.Method and analysis To test this, we present the Cancer PREDisposition In Childhood by Trio sequencing study (PREDICT). This study will assess the clinical utility of trio WGS to identify CP in unselected patients with cancer 21 years or younger in New South Wales, Australia. PREDICT will perform analysis of biological parents to determine heritability and will examine the psychosocial impact of this trio sequencing approach. PREDICT also includes a broad genomics research programme to identify new candidate genes associated with childhood cancer risk.Ethics and dissemination By evaluating the feasibility, utility and psychosocial impact of trio WGS to identify CP in paediatric cancer, PREDICT will inform how such comprehensive testing can be incorporated into a standard of care at diagnosis for all childhood cancer patients.Trial registration number NCT04903782.