Cancers (Dec 2022)

Low Frequency of Cancer-Predisposition Gene Mutations in Liver Transplant Candidates with Hepatocellular Carcinoma

  • Klara Horackova,
  • Sona Frankova,
  • Petra Zemankova,
  • Petr Nehasil,
  • Marta Cerna,
  • Magdalena Neroldova,
  • Barbora Otahalova,
  • Jan Kral,
  • Milena Hovhannisyan,
  • Viktor Stranecky,
  • Tomas Zima,
  • Marketa Safarikova,
  • Marta Kalousova,
  • CZECANCA Consortium,
  • Jan Novotny,
  • Jan Sperl,
  • Marianna Borecka,
  • Sandra Jelinkova,
  • Michal Vocka,
  • Marketa Janatova,
  • Petra Kleiblova,
  • Zdenek Kleibl,
  • Milan Jirsa,
  • Jana Soukupova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15010201
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. 201

Abstract

Read online

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) mainly stems from liver cirrhosis and its genetic predisposition is believed to be rare. However, two recent studies describe pathogenic/likely pathogenic germline variants (PV) in cancer-predisposition genes (CPG). As the risk of de novo tumors might be increased in PV carriers, especially in immunosuppressed patients after a liver transplantation, we analyzed the prevalence of germline CPG variants in HCC patients considered for liver transplantation. Using the panel NGS targeting 226 CPGs, we analyzed germline DNA from 334 Czech HCC patients and 1662 population-matched controls. We identified 48 PVs in 35 genes in 47/334 patients (14.1%). However, only 7/334 (2.1%) patients carried a PV in an established CPG (PMS2, 4×NBN, FH or RET). Only the PV carriers in two MRN complex genes (NBN and RAD50) were significantly more frequent among patients over controls. We found no differences in clinicopathological characteristics between carriers and non-carriers. Our study indicated that the genetic component of HCC is rare. The HCC diagnosis itself does not meet criteria for routine germline CPG genetic testing. However, a low proportion of PV carriers may benefit from a tailored follow-up or targeted therapy and germline testing could be considered in liver transplant recipients.

Keywords