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Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer: A Comparative Cohort Study According to Pathogenic Variant Status.

Cancers

Authors: Tim Marwitz, Robert Hüneburg, Isabel Spier, Jan-Frederic Lau, Glen Kristiansen, Philipp Lingohr, Jörg C Kalff, Stefan Aretz, Jacob Nattermann, Christian P Strassburg

Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC) is an inherited cancer susceptibility syndrome characterized by an elevated risk for diffuse gastric cancer (DGC) and lobular breast cancer (LBC). Some patients fulfilling the clinical testing criteria harbor a pathogenic or germline variant. However, the underlying mechanism for around 80% of the patients with a family or personal history of DGC and LBC has so far not been elucidated. In this cohort study, patients meeting the 2015 HDGC clinical testing criteria were included, and subsequently, sequencing was performed. Of the 207 patients (161 families) in this study, we detected 21 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants (PV) in 60 patients (28 families) and one PV in two patients from one family. Sixty-eight percent ( = 141) of patients were female. The overall PV detection rate was 18% (29/161 families). Criterion 1 and 3 of the 2015 HDGC testing criteria yielded the highest detection rate of PVs (21% and 28%). PV carriers and patients without proven PV were compared. Risk of gastric cancer (GC) (38/62 61% vs. 102/140 73%) and age at diagnosis (40 ± 13 years vs. 44 ± 12 years) were similar between the two groups. However, GC was more advanced in gastrectomy specimens of patients without PV (81% vs. 26%). LBC prevalence in female carriers of a PV was 20% ( = 8/40). Clinical phenotypes differed strongly between families with the same PV. Emphasis should be on detecting more causative genes predisposing for HDGC and improve the management of patients without a proven pathogenic germline variant.

PMID: 33322525

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