Incidence of Germline Mutations in Cancer-Predisposition Genes in Children with Hematologic Malignancies: a Report from the Pediatric Cancer Genome Project

Author:

Walsh Michael11,Wu Gang11,Edmonson Michael11,Gruber Tanja A111,Easton John1,Yergeau Donald1,Vadodaria Bhavin1,Ma Xiaotu11,Chen Xiang11,McGee Rose1,Odom Christine1,Shurtleff Sheila A11,Parker Matthew11,Rusch Michael11,Hedlund Erin11,Huether Robert11,Lemmon Gordon11,Nakitandwe Joy11,Becksfort Jared11,Nagahawatte Panduka11,Dong Li11,Gedman Amanda Larson11,Faber Zachary J11,Cheng Jinjun11,Dang Jinjun1,Pui Ching-Hon1,Nichols Kim E1,Gajjar Amar11,Ellison David W11,Pappo Alberto11,Mullighan Charles G.11,Mardis Elaine R2,Wilson Richard K2,Zhang Jinghui1,Downing James R11

Affiliation:

1. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN

2. Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO

Abstract

Abstract Pathologic germ line mutations that predispose patients to cancer are estimated to occur in 4-30% of all pediatric oncology cases. In addition to leukemia specific familial predisposition syndromes, children with rare constitutional syndromes, heterogeneous dysmorphic syndromes, and multiple-cancer hereditary predisposition syndromes are all at an increased risk for hematologic malignancies. However, to date no genome-wide analysis has been done to define the range of germ line mutations that occur in pediatric patients with hematological malignancies. To determine the frequency of pediatric cancer patients that have germ line variants of pathological significance in genes that predisposed to cancer, we analyzed the germ line and tumor DNA from 1120 pediatric cancer patients that were enrolled in the St. Jude – Washington University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project (PCGP). Samples were analyzed by whole-genome sequencing (n = 595), whole-exome sequencing (n = 456), or both (n = 69). Single nucleotide variants (SNVs), insertions/deletions (indels), structural variations (SV) and copy number alterations (CNAs) were detected using our analytical pipeline and all single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) previously identified in non-cancer populations were filtered out. Our analysis then focused on the 23 cancer predisposition genes recently recommended for germ line analysis by the American College of Genetics and Genomics, along with an additional 8 genes that have been previously shown to predispose to pediatric cancer at a high penetrance. All variants in these 31 genes were classified as pathologic, likely pathologic, uncertain significance, likely benign, and benign based on literature review and in-silico predictions on the effect of novel mutations. An expanded analysis including a total of 565 genes known to play a role in oncogenesis was also evaluated. Pathologic or likely pathologic germ line variants in one of the 31 genes were detected in 8% (90/1120) of patients, including: 16% (46/287) of patients with solid tumors, 8.6% (21/245) with brain tumors, and 3.9% (23/588) with leukemia. Expanding this analysis to 565 cancer gene resulted in only a slight increase, with a pathologic or likely pathologic variant being detected in 8.6% (97/1120) of patients. The most frequently effected genes included TP53 (n=48), APC (n=7) and BRCA2(n=6). Importantly, in >50% of these patients, analysis of their tumor DNA revealed the absence of a wild type allele for the cancer predisposition gene that was altered in the germ line. The 588 pediatric patients with leukemia included 116 acute myeloid leukemias (AMLs: FAB M7 n=20; Core Binding Factor leukemias n=86; MLL-R n=10) and 472 acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALLs: E2A-PBX1 n=53; ERG-R n=39; TEL-AML1 n=53; Hyperdiploid n=69; Hypodiploid n=47; BCR-ABL1 n=40; T-ALL n=32; MLL-R n=40; BCR-ABL-like n=31; and Other n=68). Across this cohort, 3.9% (23/588) of leukemia patients harbored a pathologic germ line mutations in one of the 31 cancer pre-disposing genes. This number increased to 4.6% (27/588; 28 mutations) when the expanded gene list was evaluated. TP53 (n=10) was the most frequently altered germ line gene in pediatric leukemia patients and was found predominantly in low-hypodiploid ALL, as previously reported. Germ line pathologic variants were also identified in KRAS, RUNX1, APC, BRCA2, and RET (2 cases each), and NRAS, SH2B3, BRCA1, MUTYH, PTCH1, SDHA,VHL, and NF2 (1 case each). Although germ line mutations in RUNX1 and SH2B3are typically associated with myeloid neoplasms, we identified these lesions in 3 cases of B lineage ALL suggesting an association with a wider spectrum of leukemia. In conclusion, a small but significant proportion of pediatric patients with leukemia carry a germ line variant of pathologic significance in a cancer predisposition gene. These results suggest that these germ line lesions likely play a direct role in the pathogenesis of the patient’s presenting leukemia. Moreover, our results suggest that these patients would benefit from future clinical surveillance for the development of a second cancer. Lastly, these data demonstrate the power of comprehensive next generation DNA/RNA sequencing for the identification of pediatric patients who carry a germ line pathologic variant in a cancer predisposition gene. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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