Introduction: Approximately 10% of cancers can be attributed to a germline mutation, confirming
an inherited cancer syndrome. Hereditary Cancer Syndrome (HCS) has significant implications
in early screening and prevention for the proband and at-risk family members and also
is critical for modern oncologic care. Multigene panels have been increasingly used
by experts and shown to be a cost-effective approach to diagnose HCS in genetic counseling
practice, with the advent of Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS). One relevant role of
multigene panels versus syndrome-specific germline testing is for patients with clinical
histories spanning several possible diagnoses and for patients with suspicious clinical
histories not meeting diagnostic criteria for a specific HCS. However, more multigene
panels are performed, more incidental findings are revealed in genes whose clinical
implications are not fully understood. Purpose: our aim was estimate the rate of unexpected results in multigene test for HCS in
patients followed in Oncogenetics Department at A.C. Camargo Cancer Center (ACCCC)
Patients and Methods: Retrospective cross-sectional study. Data from patients seen at the Oncogenetics
Department of ACCCC who carried out multigene panels to investigate hereditary cancer
syndrome, from January 2014 to July 2018. Unexpected result was defined when the affected
gene was not considered for the initial diagnostic criteria. Results: A total of 535 patients performed multigene panels based on genetic counseling, 492
females and 44 males with an average age of 48 years. Panels of 5-79 genes were performed
in fifteen different laboratories. Of these, in 136 (25.4%) were found a pathogenic
variant, and in 187 (34.9%) was found at least one variant of uncertain significance
(VUS). Among the positive results, 15.4% (21 out of 136) were considered as unexpected
Results: TP53 (6), monoallelic MUTYH (5), NBN (1), BRIP (1), BARD1(1), DIS3L2 (1), SPINK1
(1), MLH3 (1), MSH6 (1), NF1 (1), CHEK2 (1) and SBDS (1) genes. Conclusions: our data point to a moderate-to-high rate of unexpected results in multigene panels
for HCS and reinforce the challenge of careful interpretation these unexpected findings
in the Genetic Counseling, including actionable genes and genes that can not change
the medical management.
Bibliographical Record
Poliana de Andrade, Camila Cavalcanti Barcelos Rodrigues, Maria Nirvana da Cruz Formiga,
Giovana Tardin Torrezan, Dirce Maria Carraro. UNEXPECTED RESULTS FROM MULTIGENE PANELS
IN HEREDITARY CANCER SYNDROME AT A LATIN-AMERICAN CANCER CENTER. Brazilian Journal
of Oncology 2019; 15.
DOI: 10.1055/s-0044-1797613