Redefinition of familial intestinal gastric cancer: clinical and genetic perspectives

Author:

Carvalho JoanaORCID,Oliveira Patricia,Senz Janine,São José Celina,Hansford Samantha,Teles Sara Pinto,Ferreira Marta,Corso GiovanniORCID,Pinheiro HugoORCID,Lemos Diana,Pascale Valeria,Roviello Franco,Huntsman David,Oliveira CarlaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundFamilial intestinal gastric cancer (FIGC) remains genetically unexplained and without testing/clinical criteria. Herein, we characterised the age of onset and disease spectrum of 50 FIGC families and searched for genetic causes potentially underlying a monogenic or an oligogenic/polygenic inheritance pattern.MethodsNormal and tumour DNA from 50 FIGC probands were sequenced using Illumina custom panels on MiSeq, and their respective germline and somatic landscapes were compared with corresponding landscapes from sporadic intestinal gastric cancer (SIGC) and hereditary diffuse gastric cancer cohorts.ResultsThe most prevalent phenotype in FIGC families was gastric cancer, detected in 138 of 208 patients (50 intestinal gastric cancer probands and 88 unknown gastric cancer histology relatives), followed by colorectal and breast cancers. After excluding benign and intronic variants lacking impact in splicing, 12 rare high-quality variants were found exclusively in 11 FIGC probands. Only two probands carried potentially deleterious variants, but lacked somatic second-hits, weakly supporting the monogenic hypothesis for FIGC. However, FIGC probands developed gastric cancer at least 10 years earlier and carried more TP53 germline common variants than SIGC (p=4.5E-03); FIGC and SIGC could be distinguished by specific germline and somatic variant profiles; there was an excess of FIGC tumours presenting microsatellite instability (38%); and FIGC tumours displayed significantly more somatic common variants than SIGC tumours (p=4.2E-06).ConclusionThis study proposed the first data-driven testing criteria for FIGC families, and supported FIGC as a genetically determined, likely polygenic, gastric cancer-predisposing disease, with earlier onset and distinct from patients with SIGC at the germline and somatic levels.

Funder

Portugal 2020 / FCT/ Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovação

European Regional Development Fund / COMPETE / POCI / PORTUGAL 2020 / FCT / Ministério da Ciência, Tecnologia e Inovação

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

No Stomach for Cancer

POCI / Programas Operacionais Regionais de Lisboa e do Algarve e FCT - Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Genetics

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