Germline sequencing in men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer from the BARCODE2 study reveals a wide range of pathogenic variants in DNA repair genes
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Published:2024-02-15
Issue:1
Volume:2
Page:
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ISSN:2731-9377
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Container-title:BJC Reports
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BJC Rep
Author:
Benafif Sarah, Jones Ann-BrittORCID, Merson Susan, Rageevakumar Reshma, McGrowder Eva, Tyler Matthew, Cafferty Fay, Hogben Matthew, Hussain Nafisa, Bancroft Elizabeth, Reid Alison, Wakerell Sarah, Karlsson Questa, Saunders Edward, Whitmore Ian, Sorensen Karina Dalsgaard, Dennis Nening, Black Evie, Wood Angela, Richards Kate, Lees Kathryn, Perna Carla, Falconer Alison, Mills Jamie, Hughes Robert, Kumar Shiyam, Mikropoulos Christos, Burnett Stephanie, Attard Gerhardt, Hall Emma, Kote-Jarai Zsofia, Eeles Ros
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The presence of germline mutations plays an increasingly important role in risk assessment and treatment of prostate cancer (PrCa). Screening for high-risk mutations in subsets of patients is becoming routine. We explore the prevalence of germline genetic mutations in men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) recruited to the BARCODE2 trial.
Methods
The BARCODE2 trial is a two-part study investigating the response to carboplatin chemotherapy in mCRPC patients carrying a germline variant in a DNA repair gene (DRG). We report interim data from Part 1, in which participants are recruited for germline genetic testing using a customised next-generation sequencing panel consisting of 115 genes.
Results
These interim results (N = 220) demonstrate a similar frequency of germline DRG variants in mCRPC patients compared with previously published data (15% detection rate). No significant clinical differences were identified between all carriers and non-carriers, though BRCA2/ATM carriers were found to have a shorter time to mCRPC diagnosis.
Conclusions
Germline pathogenic/likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants in BRCA2 and ATM genes are associated with a shorter time to progression and rarer P/LP variants in other DRG genes may play a role in mCRPC. This justifies the use of routine screening of men with advanced PrCa for germline variants and supports the need for an expanded panel test.
Funder
FP7 Ideas: European Research Council Novo Nordisk Foundation Tandem Programme
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference28 articles.
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