Unrecognised actionability for breast cancer risk variants identified in a national-level review of Australian familial cancer centres

Author:

Spurdle Amanda1ORCID,Fortuno Cristina,Cops Elisa,Davidson Aimee1ORCID,Hadler Johanna,Innella Giovanni2ORCID,McKenzie Maddison,Parsons Michael1ORCID,Campbell Ainsley,Dubowsky Andrew,Fargas Verna,Field Michael3ORCID,Fan Helen Mar,Dowson Cassandra4,Poplawski NicolaORCID,Warwick Linda,Williams Rachel,Beshay Victoria,Edwards Caitlin,Johns Andrea,McPhillips Mary,Kumar Vanessa,Scott Rodney5,Williams Mark,SCOTT Hamish6ORCID,James Paul7ORCID,Spurdle Amanda8

Affiliation:

1. QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

2. Università di Bologna

3. GOLD (Genetics of Learning Disability) service

4. Genetic Services of Western Australia

5. University of Newcastle and the Hunter Medical Research Institute

6. hamish.scott@sa.gov.au

7. Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre

8. Faculty of Medicine

Abstract

Abstract

Breast cancer remains a significant global health challenge. In Australia, the adoption of publicly-funded multigene panel testing for eligible cancer patients has increased accessibility to personalised care, yet has also highlighted the increasing prevalence of variants of uncertain significance (VUS), complicating clinical decision-making. This project aimed to explore the spectrum and actionability of breast cancer VUS in Australian familial cancer centers (FCCs). Leveraging data from 11 FCCs participating in the Inherited Cancer Connect database, we retrieved VUS results from 1472 patients. Through ClinVar crosschecks and application of gene-specific ACMG/AMP guidelines, we showed the potential for reclassification of 4% of unique VUS as pathogenic or likely pathogenic, and 79% as benign or likely benign. Surveys conducted with FCCs and diagnostic laboratories described current practices and challenges in variant reclassifications, highlighting resource constraints preventing periodic VUS review and notifications from the laboratories to the FCCs. Our study suggests there are benefits to routine VUS review and reclassification, particularly in publicly-funded healthcare systems. Future research should focus on assessing the clinical impact and cost-effectiveness of implementing routine variant review practices, alongside efforts to enhance communication between FCCs and laboratories.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference33 articles.

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