| Literature DB >> 30349384 |
Xandra García-González1, Sara López-Tarruella2, María Isabel García1, Eva González-Haba1, Carolina Blanco1, Sara Salvador-Martin1, Yolanda Jerez2, Fabienne Thomas3, María Jarama1, María Sanjurjo Sáez1, Miguel Martín2, Luis Andrés López-Fernández1.
Abstract
Severe, life-threatening adverse reactions to capecitabine sometimes occur in the treatment of solid tumors. Screening for dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPYD) deficiency is encouraged before start of treatment, but the genetic variants that are commonly analyzed often fail to explain toxicities seen in clinical practice. Here we describe the case of a 79-year-old Caucasian female with breast cancer who presented with life-threatening, rapidly increasing toxicity after 1 week of treatment with capecitabine and for whom routine genetic DPYD test resulted negative. DPYD exon sequencing found variant c.2242+1G>T at the donor splicing site of exon 19. This variant is responsible for skipping of exon 19 and subsequent generation of a non-functional DPYD enzyme. This variant has not been described previously but was found in three other members of the patient's family. With this case, we show that exon sequencing of DPYD in patients who experience marked toxicity to fluoropyrimidines and test negative for commonly evaluated variants can prove extremely useful for identifying new genetic variants and better explain adverse reactions causality.Entities:
Keywords: adverse drug reaction; breast cancer; fluoropyrimidine; pharmacogenetics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30349384 PMCID: PMC6190816 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S174470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
List of primers used for DPYD exon sequencing
| Exon number | Forward | Reverse | Fragment size |
|---|---|---|---|
| EXON 1 | ACTTGGCTCTCTGGCTGGAGCTT | AAACTTTCCCGCGTCTCTCACTC | 234 |
| EXON 2 | TTAGCCAGGTGTGGTAGCGTAC | TGCCTTACAATGTGTGGAGTG | 410 |
| EXON 3 | TGAGACTTCTGTGACAGCTGTA | CCTCAAGGGAAGTCTCTCCAC | 442 |
| EXON 4 | GGAGTGCCAAAGATGAAACACA | TGGATTTGCTAAGACAAGCTG | 362 |
| EXON 5 | TCCTATGTGTCAAATACTCTGCT | TGGGTATCAACAGAGCACCA | 444 |
| EXON 6 | AGGAGGCATGACTCTAGAAAGG | CCATTAAAAGAAATATTCACAGGGCT | 719 |
| EXON 7 | AGAATGTAGATGTCCTCATGCA | TGCATGACATTTGCTGTTAATC | 331 |
| EXON 8 | AGCCCTTAATAGAACATGTTCCT | TGAAGGCAGTCATTCTTCTGG | 374 |
| EXON 9 | TGCTTACAGATGTTTTCCTCT | ACAATGTGCTGCTGAGCTTG | 324 |
| EXON 10 | TGGAAAACTGCAAGATGCAA | AGCCCTTGAGTATTGACAAAG | 312 |
| EXON 11 | TGGTGAAAGAAAAAGCTGCAT | GTTCTTTTCAATACTTGCCACT | 548 |
| EXON 12 | TGTGTTGTTAACTCCAATATTTCGT | TCAAGCATCCTCCCGCTT | 621 |
| EXON 13 | TTCGGATGCTGTGTTGAAGT | AATGTGTAATGATAGGTCTTGTCAAA | 443 |
| EXON 14 | GCTTTTCTTTGTCAAAAGGAGAC | AGCTTCACATTGTGTGGGTT | 409 |
| EXON 15 | TAATTCCAAAGCCCCAAATG | TTTCTCATGGCAGCTCTTTATTT | 346 |
| EXON 16 | TCAACGGTGAAAGCCTATTG | AGCTTCCCTCATTTTCCACT | 318 |
| EXON 17 | TTTGTCTTGCACGTCTCCAG | AGGATCTTGTGTTTCCAGATCA | 437 |
| EXON 18 | TGAGAAAGTAAAGTTGTGGTAATT | GGGATCATAAAGGGCACAAA | 423 |
| EXON 19 | TCCAGTGACGCTGTCATCA | ACAGGACAGGAAATAAACCTCA | 434 |
| EXON 20 | AGACGGCTACTGATCCATCA | TCTGAAATAGAAACCAAGGCTGA | 375 |
| EXON 21 | CCCATTTTTCTCTTCTCTGAGC | ATGCATGCTTGCCAGTGT | 423 |
| EXON 22 | TCTTTCAGAAGACAAACATCTAAGC | CAGAAAATGCTTTCTGCCGTA | 402 |
| EXON 23 | ACGCTAAAATGGGGACATTG | ACATAAGACAACTGGCAGTG | 517 |
| EXON SKIPPING | TTAAAATCTGATGGCACACCTTG | TGCTTTTCAGATAAAGCAGGGCT |
Figure 1Sequence electropherogram of the 2242+1G>T variant. Blue, dCTP; green, dATP; black, dGTP; red, dTTP.
Abbreviations: dATP, deoxyadenosine triphosphate; dCTP, deoxycytidine triphosphate; dGTP, deoxyguanosine triphosphate; DPYD, dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase; dTTP, deoxythymidine triphosphate.
Figure 2Exon skipping sequence.
Notes: Left: Electrophoresis of amplified cDNA from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of a patient carrying the 2242+1G>T variant. Right, upper: Graphic representation of skipping of exon 19. Right, lower: Sequence electropherogram using the primer Ex18F. A double sequence is observed for 85 nucleotides corresponding to overlapping of exons 19 and 20.
Figure 3Structures of wild-type DPYD and truncated DPYD.
Notes: The interpretation of mutation effect and the molecular modeling were performed by using Deep View Swiss-PDB viewer and Tasser. (A) Modeling of wild-type DPYD; (B) modeling of truncated DPYD.
DPYD phenotyping results
| UH2 concentration, ng/mL | U concentration, ng/mL | UH2/U concentration ratio | Activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| 89.32 | 13.47 | 6.6 | Normal |
| 85.16 | 24.13 | 3.5 | Deficient |
| 47.19 | 18.45 | 2.6 | Deficient |
Notes:
Criteria for activity deficiency: uracil concentration >16 ng/mL and/or UH2/U ratio <6.
Abbreviations: UH2, dihydrouracil; U, uracil.