Cascading After Peridiagnostic Cancer Genetic Testing: An Alternative to Population-Based Screening

Author:

Offit Kenneth12,Tkachuk Kaitlyn A.1,Stadler Zsofia K.12,Walsh Michael F.1,Diaz-Zabala Hector1,Levin Jeffrey D.1,Steinsnyder Zoe1,Ravichandran Vignesh1,Sharaf Ravi N.2,Frey Melissa K.2,Lipkin Steven M.2,Robson Mark E.132,Hamilton Jada G.142,Vijai Joseph12,Mukherjee Semanti1

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Genetics Service, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center; and Program in Cancer Biology and Genetics, Sloan Kettering Institute, New York, NY

2. Weill Cornell College of Medicine, Cornell University, New York, NY

3. Breast Medicine Service, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY

4. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY

Abstract

PURPOSE Despite advances in DNA sequencing technology and expanded medical guidelines, the vast majority of individuals carrying pathogenic variants of common cancer susceptibility genes have yet to be identified. An alternative to population-wide genetic screening of healthy individuals would exploit the trend for genetic testing at the time of cancer diagnosis to guide therapy and prevention, combined with augmented familial diffusion or “cascade” of genomic risk information. METHODS Using a multiple linear regression model, we derived the time interval to detect an estimated 3.9 million individuals in the United States with a pathogenic variant in 1 of 18 cancer susceptibility genes. We analyzed the impact of the proportion of incident patients sequenced, varying observed frequencies of pathogenic germline variants in patients with cancer, differential rates of diffusion of genetic information in families, and family size. RESULTS The time to detect inherited cancer predisposing variants in the population is affected by the extent of cascade to first-, second-, and third-degree relatives (FDR, SDR, TDR, respectively), family size, prevalence of mutations in patients with cancer, and the proportion of patients with cancer sequenced. In a representative scenario, assuming a 7% prevalence of pathogenic variants across cancer types, an average family size of 3 per generation, and 15% of incident patients with cancer in the United States undergoing germline testing, the time to detect all 3.9 million individuals with pathogenic variants in 18 cancer susceptibility genes would be 46.2, 22.3, 13.6, and 9.9 years if 10%, 25%, 50%, and 70%, respectively, of all FDR, SDR, and TDR were tested for familial mutations. CONCLUSION Peridiagnostic and cascade cancer genetic testing offers an alternative strategy to achieve population-wide identification of cancer susceptibility mutations.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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