| Literature DB >> 30736435 |
Angela Toss1, Marta Venturelli2, Eleonora Molinaro3, Stefania Pipitone4, Elena Barbieri5, Isabella Marchi6, Elena Tenedini7,8, Lucia Artuso9,10, Sara Castellano11, Marco Marino12, Enrico Tagliafico7,8, Elisabetta Razzaboni13, Elisabetta De Matteis14, Stefano Cascinu15, Laura Cortesi16.
Abstract
The identification of BRCA mutations plays a crucial role in the management of hereditary cancer prevention and treatment. Nonetheless, BRCA-testing in pancreatic cancer (PC) patients is not universally introduced in clinical practice. A retrospective analysis was conducted, firstly, to evaluate the rate of BRCA-positive families among those presenting a family history of PC besides breast and/or ovarian cancer. Secondly, the relationship between BRCA pathogenic variants and PC risk was evaluated. Finally, the characteristics of PC developed in BRCA families were described. Among 5143 family trees reporting breast and/or ovarian cancer cases, 392 showed a family history of PC. A total of 35 families (24.5% selected by the Modena Criteria and 21.3% by the NCCN Criteria) were positive to BRCA testing. Among the BRCA1 mutations, 36.8% were found within a region defined by c.3239⁻c.3917, whilst 43.7% of BRCA2 mutations were located within c.7180⁻c.8248. This study confirmed that an increase in the rate of positive tests in families with PC when associated to breast and/or ovarian tumors. Moreover, this analysis indicated two possible Pancreatic Cancer Cluster Regions that should be verified in future research. Finally, PC in families with breast and/or ovarian cancer history, particularly in BRCA families, were diagnosed at younger age and showed better one-year overall survival.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA genes; genetic testing; hereditary cancer; homologous recombination; pancreatic cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 30736435 PMCID: PMC6406586 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11020193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
The NCCN BRCA testing criteria (NCCN Guidelines Version 2.2019).
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| OC, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer at any age. |
| Male breast cancer. |
| Triple negative BC diagnosed ≤ 60 years. |
| BC diagnosed 46–50 years with a second BC primary at any age. |
| BC diagnosed 46–50 years with ≥ 1 close relative with BC or prostate cancer (GS ≥ 7) or with unknown or limited family history. |
| BC diagnosed at any age with ≥ 1 close relative with BC ≤ 50 years or OC or male BC or metastatic prostate cancer or pancreatic cancer. |
| BC diagnosed at any age with ≥ 2 additional diagnosis of BC at any age in patient and/or in close blood relatives. |
| Personal history of BC or prostate cancer (GS ≥ 7) with Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. |
| Pancreatic cancer. |
| Metastatic prostate cancer. |
| Prostate cancer (GS ≥ 7) at any age with ≥1 close blood relative with OC at any age or pancreatic cancer or metastatic prostate cancer or BC ≤ 50 years. |
| Prostate cancer (GS ≥ 7) at any age with ≥ 2 close blood relatives with BC or prostate cancer (any grade). |
| BRCA 1/2 pathogenic/likely pathogenic mutation detected by tumor profiling of any tumor type in the absence of germline pathogenic/likely pathogenic variant analysis. |
| Regardless of family history, some individuals with a BRCA-related cancer may benefit from genetic testing to determinate eligibility for targeted treatment. |
| An individual who does not meet the other criteria but with ≥ 1 first- or second-degree blood relative meeting any of the above criteria. The significant limitations of interpreting test results for an unaffected individual should be discussed. |
BC: Breast Cancer; OC: ovarian cancer; GS: Gleason Score; Close blood relatives include first-, second- and third- degree relatives on same side of family.
The Modena Criteria (AIOM Guidelines 2018).
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| OC, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer (excluded mucinous and borderline) at any age. |
| Male Breast Cancer. |
| Triple negative BC diagnosed ≤60 years. |
| BC diagnosed ≤ 35 years. |
| At least 1 BC and at least 1 OC. |
| At least 2 first-degree blood relative with BC, at least one diagnosed ≤ 40 years or bilateral. |
| Healthy individuals with an estimated risk of carrying a BRCA mutation ≥ 40%, calculated with the BRCAPro risk calculator (Version CaGene6) |
BC: Breast Cancer; OC: ovarian cancer.
Figure 1Study flow chart.
Figure 2Distribution of BRCA1 pathogenic variants. The mutations detected twice are shown in bold.
Figure 3Distribution of BRCA2 pathogenic variants. The mutations detected twice are shown in bold.
Pancreatic cancer characteristics in our sample and in the general population [20,21,22].
| Overall Study Population | BRCA1 Families | BRCA2 families | General | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at Pancreatic Cancer Diagnosis | 65.8 (20–94) | 65.2 (46–85) | 66.3 (49–80) | 70 [ |
| one-year OS | 42% | 42.8% | 61.5% | 23% [ |
| 5-year OS | 6.6% | 7.1% | 0% | 8.1% [ |