| Literature DB >> 30233642 |
Mathias Cavaillé1,2, Flora Ponelle-Chachuat1,2, Nancy Uhrhammer1,2, Sandrine Viala1,2, Mathilde Gay-Bellile1,2, Maud Privat1,2, Yannick Bidet1,2, Yves-Jean Bignon1,2.
Abstract
A family with an aggregation of rare early onset multiple primary tumors has been managed in our oncogenetics department: the proband developed four early onset carcinomas between ages 31 and 33 years, including acral melanoma, bilateral clear cell renal carcinoma (RC), and follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma. The proband's parent developed orbital lymphoma and small intestine mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma between 40 and 50 years old. Whole-exome-sequencing (WES) of the nuclear family (proband, parents, and sibling) identified in the proband a de novo deleterious heterozygous mutation c.1003C > T (p.Arg335∗) in the phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) gene. Furthermore, WES allowed analysis of the nuclear family's genetic background, and identified deleterious variants in two candidate modifier genes: CEACAM1 and MIB2. CEACAM1, a tumor suppressor gene, presents loss of expression in clear cell RC and is involved in proliferation of B cells. It could explain in part the phenotype of proband's parent and the occurrence of clear cell RC in the proband. Deleterious mutations in the MIB2 gene are associated with melanoma invasion, and could explain the occurrence of melanoma in the proband. Cowden syndrome is a hereditary autosomal dominant disorder associated with increased risk of muco-cutaneous features, hamartomatous tumors, and cancer. This atypical presentation, including absence of muco-cutaneous lesions, four primary early onset tumors and bilateral clear cell RC, has not been described before. This encourages including the PTEN gene in panel testing in the context of early onset RC, whatever the histological subtype. Further studies are required to determine the implication of CEACAM1 and MIB2 in the severity of Cowden syndrome in our proband and occurrence of early onset MALT lymphoma in a parent.Entities:
Keywords: whole-exome-sequencing; CEACAM1; Cowden syndrome; MALT lymphoma; MIB2; PTEN; melanoma; renal carcinoma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30233642 PMCID: PMC6127642 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2018.00353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Testing and clinical diagnosis criteria.
| CS/PHTS testing criteria |
|---|
| Individual from a family with a known PTEN mutation |
| Individual meeting clinical diagnosis criteria for CS/PHTS |
| Individual with personal history of: |
| - BRRS or Lhermitte–Duclos disease or Autism spectrum disorder and macrocephaly or |
| - Two or more biopsy-proven trichilemmomas or |
| - two or more major criteria (one must be macrocephaly) or |
| - Three major criteria without macrocephaly or |
| - One major and > 3 minor criteria or |
| - >4 criteria |
| At-risk individual with a relative with a clinical diagnosis of CS/PHTS or BRRS for whom testing has not been performed (At-risk: any one major criterion or two minor criteria) |
| Breast cancer |
| Endometrial cancer |
| Follicular thyroid cancer |
| Multiple gastro-intestinal hamartomas or ganglioneuromas |
| Macrocephaly |
| Macular pigmentation of gland penis |
| Mucocutaneous lesions (one biopsy-proven trichilemmoma, multiple palmoplantar keratosis, multiple or extensive oral mucosal papillomatosis, multiple cutaneous facial papules) |
| Autism spectrum disorder |
| Colon cancer |
| >3 esophageal glycogenic acanthoses |
| Lipomas |
| Intellectual disability (QI < 75) |
| Papillary or follicular variant of papillary thyroid cancer |
| Thyroid structural lesions |
| Renal cell carcinoma |
| Single gastro-intestinal hamartoma or ganglioneuroma |
| Testicular lipomatosis |
| Vascular anomalies |
| Operational diagnosis in an individual (either of the following): |
| (1) Three or more major criteria, but one must include macrocephaly, Lhermitte–Duclos disease, or gastrointestinal hamartomas; or |
| (2) Two major and three minor criteria. |
| Operational diagnosis in a family where one individual meets revised PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome clinical diagnostic criteria or has a PTEN mutation: |
| (1) Any two major criteria with or without minor criteria; or |
| (2) One major and two minor criteria; or |
| (3) Three minor criteria. |
Variants of interest identified by WES in nuclear family and their segregation.
Phenotypes and cancers associated with mutation c.1003C > T (p.Arg335X) in PTEN gene in literature.