| Literature DB >> 24936644 |
Juliana Giacomazzi1, Marcia S Graudenz2, Cynthia A B T Osorio3, Patricia Koehler-Santos4, Edenir I Palmero5, Marcelo Zagonel-Oliveira6, Rodrigo A D Michelli5, Cristovam Scapulatempo Neto5, Gabriela C Fernandes5, Maria Isabel W S Achatz7, Ghyslaine Martel-Planche8, Fernando A Soares3, Maira Caleffi9, José Roberto Goldim10, Pierre Hainaut11, Suzi A Camey12, Patricia Ashton-Prolla13.
Abstract
Germline TP53 mutations predispose individuals to multiple cancers and are associated with Li-Fraumeni/Li-Fraumeni-Like Syndromes (LFS/LFL). The founder mutation TP53 p.R337H is detected in 0.3% of the general population in southern Brazil. This mutation is associated with an increased risk of childhood adrenal cortical carcinoma (ACC) but is also common in Brazilian LFS/LFL families. Breast Cancer (BC) is one of the most common cancers diagnosed in TP53 mutation carriers. We have assessed the prevalence of p.R337H in two groups: (1) 59 BC affected women with a familial history (FH) suggestive of hereditary cancer syndrome but no LFS/LFL features; (2) 815 BC affected women unselected for cancer FH, diagnosed with BC at or before age 45 or at age 55 or older. Among group 1 and group 2 patients, 2/59 (3.4%, CI95%: 0.4%-11.7%) and 70/815 (8.6%, CI95%: 6.8%-10.7%), respectively, were p.R337H carriers in the germline. The prevalence of p.R337H was higher in women diagnosed with BC at or before age 45 (12.1%, CI95%: 9.1%-15.8%) than at age 55 or older (5.1%, CI95%: 3.2%-7.7%), p<0.001). The Brazilian founder p.R337H haplotype was detected in all carriers analysed. These results suggest that inheritance of p.R337H may significantly contribute to the high incidence of BC in Brazil, in addition to its recently demonstrated impact on the risk of childhood ACC.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24936644 PMCID: PMC4061038 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Pedigrees of mutation-positive probands from group 1.
Blackened symbols represent cancer-affected relatives. An arrow indicates the proband. Dx: age at diagnosis; WT: wild-type; WT: wild-type; *TP53 (p.R337H) mutation carriers and negative for BRCA1/2; **TP53 (p.R337H) and BRCA1 negative and BRCA2 mutation carrier; ***TP53 (p.R337H) negative an BRCA1/2 negative.
TP53 p.R337H mutation status reported according to the patient’s age at BC diagnosis and the recruitment centre (n = 815).
| RC 1 (n = 293) | RC 2 (n = 238) | RC 3 (n = 284) | Total (n = 815) | |
|
| ||||
|
|
| |||
| ≤45 yrs | 14/136 (10·3%) | 33/123 (26·8%) | 2/144 (1·4%) | 49/403 (12·1%) |
| ≥55 yrs | 3/157 (1·9%) | 17/115 (14·8%) | 1/140 (0·7%) | 21/412 (5·1%) |
|
| ||||
|
|
| |||
| ≤45 yrs | 122/136 (89·7%) | 90/123 (73·2%) | 142/144 (98·6%) | 354/403 (87·4%) |
| ≥55 yrs | 154/157 (98·1%) | 98/115 (85·2%) | 139/140 (99·3%) | 391/412 (94·9%) |
Legend: n-number of subjects; RC-recruitment centre: 1-Porto Alegre, 2-São Paulo and 3-Barretos; BC-breast cancer.
Figure 2The geographic distribution of breast cancer-affected women in group 2 whose city of residence was known (n = 657).
Legend: Blue dots, red triangles and green stars represent the cities of residence of women who are homozygous normal, heterozygous, and homozygous mutant p.R337H, respectively.