| Literature DB >> 33924881 |
Cristina Carrato1, Carolina Sanz1, Ana María Muñoz-Mármol1, Ignacio Blanco2, Marta Pineda3,4, Jesús Del Valle3,4, Estela Dámaso3, Manel Esteller4,5,6,7, Eva Musulen1,5,8.
Abstract
Biallelic germline mismatch repair (MMR) gene (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2) mutations are an extremely rare event that causes constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) syndrome. CMMRD is underdiagnosed and often debuts with pediatric malignant brain tumors. A high degree of clinical awareness of the CMMRD phenotype is needed to identify new cases. Immunohistochemical (IHC) assessment of MMR protein expression and analysis of microsatellite instability (MSI) are the first tools with which to initiate the study of this syndrome in solid malignancies. MMR IHC shows a hallmark pattern with absence of staining in both neoplastic and non-neoplastic cells for the biallelic mutated gene. However, MSI often fails in brain malignancies. The aim of this report is to draw attention to the peculiar IHC profile that characterizes CMMRD syndrome and to review the difficulties in reaching an accurate diagnosis by describing the case of two siblings with biallelic MSH6 germline mutations and brain tumors. Given the difficulties involved in early diagnosis of CMMRD we propose the use of the IHC of MMR proteins in all malignant brain tumors diagnosed in individuals younger than 25 years-old to facilitate the diagnosis of CMMRD and to select those neoplasms that will benefit from immunotherapy treatment.Entities:
Keywords: MMR gene expression; MSH6 gene; constitutional mismatch repair deficiency syndrome; immunohistochemistry
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33924881 PMCID: PMC8124255 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22094629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Scoring system to determine germline testing in eligibility for CMMRD.
| Indication for CMMRD Testing in a Cancer Patient | ≥3 Points |
|---|---|
| Malignancies/premalignancies: one is mandatory; if more than one is present in the patient, add the points | |
| Carcinoma from the LS spectrum * at age <25 years | 3 points |
| Multiple bowel adenomas at age <25 years and absence of APC/MUTYH mutation(s) or a single high-grade dysplasia adenoma at age <25 years | 3 points |
| WHO grade III or IV glioma at age <25 years | 2 points |
| NHL of T-cell lineage or sPNET at age <18 years | 2 points |
| Any malignancy at age <18 years | 1 point |
|
| |
| Clinical sign of NF1 and/or ≥2 hyperpigmented and/or hypopigmented skin alterations Ø > 1 cm in the patient | 2 points |
| Diagnosis of LS in a first-degree or second-degree relative | 2 points |
| Carcinoma from LS spectrum * before the age of 60 in first-degree, second-degree, and third-degree relative | 1 point |
| A sibling with carcinoma from the LS spectrum *, high-grade glioma, sPNET or NHL | 2 points |
| A sibling with any type of childhood malignancy | 1 point |
| Multiple pilomatricomas in the patient | 2 points |
| One pilomatricoma in the patient | 1 point |
| Agenesis of the corpus callosum or non-therapy-induced cavernoma in the patient | 1 point |
| Consanguineous parents | 1 point |
| Deficiency/reduced levels of IgG2/4 and/or IgA | 1 point |
* Colorectal, endometrial, small bowel, ureter, renal pelvis, biliary tract, stomach, bladder carcinoma. Abbreviations: CMMRD, constitutional mismatch repair deficiency; LS, Lynch syndrome; NHL, non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas; sPNET, supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumors.
CMMRD diagnostic criteria.
| Criterion | Germline result * | Positive Ancillary Testing † | Clinical Phenotype | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Definitive diagnosis (strong evidence of CMMRD) | 1 | Biallelic pathogenic variants (P/P) *, confirmed in trans. ‡ | Not required, unless unaffected >25 years then one required. † | Not required if under age 25 (if no malignancy over age 25, ancillary testing required). |
| 2 | Biallelic P/LP or LP/LP * variants, confirmed in trans ‡ | One required† for hallmark CMMRD. Two required† for C4CMMRD criteria. ** | Hallmark CMMRD cancer diagnosis or C4CMMRD criteria of 3 points ** (then two ancillary tests required). | |
| 3 | Heterozygous P or LP variant (±VUS * or likely benign variants). | One required †. | Hallmark CMMRD cancer diagnosis. | |
| 4 | No P or LP MMR variants (including VUS/ VUS). †† | Two required †. | Hallmark CMMRD cancer diagnosis. | |
| Likely diagnosis (moderate evidence of CMMRD) | 5 | Biallelic P/LP * or LP/LP variants, confirmed in trans.§ | Not required. | C4CMMRD criteria of 3 points. ** |
| 6 | No P or LP MMR variants (including VUS/ VUS). †† | One required. † | Hallmark CMMRD cancer diagnosis. | |
| 7 | Heterozygous P or LP variant or no testing available (i.e., deceased proband). | Two required. † | C4CMMRD criteria of 3 points. ** Individuals aged <18 with NF1 features (i.e., no malignancy or polyposis history). |
* Biallelic–impacts same gene on both parental alleles (i.e., PMS2/PMS2); P, pathogenic (ACMG C5); LP, likely pathogenic (ACMG C4); VUS (ACMG C3). Multigene panel testing is recommended to investigate overlapping conditions. Consider phenotype of individual to rule out overlapping syndromes. All families should be assessed in a specialized center for diagnosis. † Ancillary testing does not include tumor mutation burden and signature at this time. Functional testing should be published with proven high sensitivity and specificity performed in an accredited (e.g., CAP-inspected) laboratory authorized to give a clinically usable report. If discrepancy occurs among tests, multiple ancillary tests should be used to reach a more conclusive decision. ‡ In trans variants can be proven by testing parents, offspring or other relatives. If unavailable to confirm variants in trans, individual should fulfil criterion 3. § If unavailable to confirm variants in trans, individual should fulfil criterion 6. Hallmark CMMRD cancer: glioma or CNS embryonal tumors 25 years, hematological cancer (excluding Hodgkin’s lymphoma) <18 years, GI adenocarcinoma <25 years, or >10 adenomatous GI polyps <18 years (after ruling out polyposis conditions). ** C4CMMRD criteria outlined in Table 1. †† Consanguinity further supports a diagnosis of CMMRD due to a homozygous MMR gene mutation that is unidentifiable. ACMG, American College of Medical Genetics; CAP, College of American Pathologists; C4CMMRD, European Consortium Care for CMMRD; CMMRD, constitutional mismatch repair deficiency syndrome; CNS, Central Nervous System; GI, gastrointestinal; MMR, mismatch repair; NF1, neurofibromatosis type 1.
Figure 1Pedigree of the family with biallelic MSH6 mutations. The arrow indicates the proband. Filled symbols indicate affected subject; open symbols unaffected subjects. The age at tumor onset is shown with the tumor type. +/− = MSH6 monoallelic mutation carrier (Lynch syndrome); +/+ = MSH6 biallelic mutation carrier (CMMRD).
Figure 2MMR protein IHC in brain tumors. (a) Glioblastoma cells and normal brain tissue (*) retained the expression of MLH1, PMS2, and MSH2 proteins. MSH6 staining is lost in both tumor cells and normal tissue (*). (b) In malignant astrocytoma, neoplastic, stromal, and endothelial cells are immunoreactive to anti-MLH1 (*), anti-PMS2, and anti-MSH2 antibodies. In contrast, the lack of MSH6 staining is observed in all cells (*). Scale bar: 100 µm.
Figure 3Electropherograms showing microsatellite profiles of five mononucleotide repeats markers (NR21, NR24, NR27, BAT25, and BAT26) in each tumor. A broader spectrum is observed in marker NR27 in the malignant astrocytoma.
POLD1 variants found in the analysis of the brain tumor of individual III.2. In silico predictions based on Alamut software.
| Variant Calling | Coverage | Rs ID | MAF | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene (transcript) | cDNA change | Predicted protein change | Allelic frequency | Read depth | (ExAC/ESP) | |
| c.952G>A | p.Glu318Lys | 0.264 | 772 | rs775232133 | 0.000010/NR | |
| c.1096G>A | p.Ala366Thr | 0.235 | 267 | – | NR/NR | |
| c.2788G>A | p.Ala930Thr | 0.482 | 410 | rs144111108 | 0.00010/0.00008 | |
| c.3157C>T | p.Arg1053Cys | 0.62 | 91 | rs779208942 | 0.00004/NR | |
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| Gene (transcript) | Splicing | SIFT (score) | Mutation Taster (p-value) | Polyphen2/HumDiv (score) | Polyphen2/HumVar (score) | |
| No changes | Deleterious | Disease causing (1) | Probably damaging (1.000) | Probably damaging (0.998) | Exonuclease(catalytic residue) | |
| Unconclusive | Deleterious | Disease causing (0.956) | Benign (0.087) | Benign (0.271) | Exonuclease | |
| No changes | Tolerated | Disease causing (1) | Probably damaging (1.000) | Probably damaging (0.998) | – | |
| No changes | Deleterious | Disease causing (1) | Probably damaging (0.999) | Probably damaging (0.973) | – | |
Abbreviations: NR, not reported.
Clinicopathological and molecular features of brain tumors in CMMRD syndrome.
| Chronological Case Order | Reference (Number) | Case ID | Age at Diagnosis (Years) | Gender | Histology | Altered Gene | IHC | MSI (Marker) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wang [ | 1 | 18 | M | Medulloblastoma |
| NA | * MSI-H |
| 2 | 2 | 7 | F | Medulloblastoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 3 | De Rosa [ | 1 | 14 | F | Oligodendroglioma GIII |
| NA | NA |
| 4 | 2 | 13 | F | Neuroblastoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 5 | Vikky [ | 1 | 4 | F | Glioma |
| NA | NA |
| 6 | Bougeard [ | 1 | 3 | M | GBM |
| NA | MSS |
| 7 | Menko [ | 1 | 10 | M | Oligodendroglioma |
| MSH6+ | MSS |
| 8 | De Vos 2004 [ | 1 | 8 | M | PNET |
| NA | NA |
| 9 | 2 | 14 | F | PNET |
| NA | NA | |
| 10 | De Vos 2006 [ | 1 | 8 | NS | PNET |
| NA | NA |
| 11 | 2 | 4 | NS | PNET |
| NA | NA | |
| 12 | 3 | 15 | NS | Glioma |
| NA | NA | |
| 13 | 4 | 6 | NS | Astrocytoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 14 | 5 | 7 | NS | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 15 | 6 | 2 | NS | Giant cell glioblastoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 16 | Agostini [ | 1 | 18 | M | Giant cell glioblastoma |
| PMS2- | MSS |
| 17 | Ostergaard [ | 1 | 9 | M | Astrocytoma GIII |
| MSH6- | NA |
| 18 | 2 | 2 | F | GBM of spinal cord |
| MSH6- | NA | |
| 19 | Hegde [ | 1 | 8 | F | GBM |
| NA | MSI-H (D2S123, D17S250, BAT25, D18S35, TP53-DI, D1S283, TP53-Penta, FGA, NR-21, NR-22, NR-24) |
| 20 | Durno [ | 1 | 14 | F | Anaplastic astrocytoma |
| NA | NA |
| 21 | Krüger [ | 1 | 9 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 22 | 2 | 6 | F | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 23 | 3 | 9 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 24 | Gururangan [ | 1 | 19 | M | Astrocytoma GIII |
| PMS2- | MSS |
| 25 | 2 | 11 | M | Anaplastic oligodendroglioma |
| NA | NA | |
| 26 | Auclair [ | 1 | 7 | F | GBM |
| * MSH6– | * MSI-L |
| 27 | 2 | 19 | F | Oligodendroglioma |
| * PMS2– | * MSI-H | |
| 28 | Poley [ | 1 | 4 | M | GBM |
| MLH1– | MSS |
| 29 | 2 | 6 | M | Oligodendroglioma |
| MSH6– | MSI-L | |
| 30 | 3 | 8 | M | Medulloblastoma |
| MSH6– | MSI-L | |
| 31 | Scott [ | 1 | 7 | F | Medulloblastoma |
| MSH6– | NA |
| 32 | Kratz [ | 1 | 9 | F | PNET |
| NA | NA |
| 33 | Etzler [ | 1 | 6 | NS | Medulloblastoma |
| NA | NA |
| 34 | 2 | 9 | NS | GBM |
| MSH6– | MSS | |
| 35 | 3 | 10 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | MSS | |
| 36 | Senter [ | 1 | 23 | NS | Brain tumor |
| NA | NA |
| 37 | 2 | 35 | NS | Glioma |
| NA | NA | |
| 38 | 3 | 7 | NS | Medulloblastoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 39 | Tan [ | 1 | 8 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 40 | Toledano [ | 1 | NS | M | Anaplastic astrocytoma GIII |
| NA | NA |
| 41 | 2 | 13 | M | Anaplastic astrocytoma GII |
| NA | NA | |
| 42 | Sjursen [ | 1 | 10 | F | Giant cell glioblastoma |
| PMS2+ | MSI-H (BAT25, BAT26,BAT40,D2S123,D5S107, D5S346, D5S406,D13S153, D17S250) |
| 43 | Giunti [ | 1 | 10 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 44 | 2 | 4 | F | Brain tumor |
| NA | NA | |
| 45 | Roy [ | 1 | 8 | F | Medulloblastoma |
| NA | NA |
| 46 | Herkert [ | 1 | 2 | M | Angiosarcoma cerebral |
| PMS2- | MSI-H (BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S250) |
| 47 | 2 | 34 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 48 | 3 | 9 | F | Anaplastic ganglioma |
| PMS2- | MSI-H (BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S250) | |
| 49 | Ilencikova [ | 1 | 11 | F | Fibrillar astrocitoma |
| NA | NA |
| 50 | 1 | 12 | M | Anaplastic astrocytoma GIII |
| MSH6- | MSI-L (BAT26) | |
| 51 | 2 | 10 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 52 | Leenen [ | 1 | 4 | F | PNET |
| PMS2- | MSS |
| 53 | 2 | 7 | M | Glioblastoma GIII |
| PMS2- | MSI-H (NR21,BAT26) | |
| 54 | Johannesma [ | 1 | 11 | F | Papillary glioneural tumor |
| PMS2– | MSS(BAT26, BAT25, NR21, NR24, MONO 27, Penta D, Penta C) |
| 55 | Baas [ | 1 | 3 | M | GBM |
| MLH1– | NA |
| 56 | 2 | 2 | M | Astrocytoma of spinal cord |
| §MLH1–/PMS2- | NA | |
| 57 | Lindsay [ | 1 | 12 | M | Medulloblastoma |
| NA | NA |
| 58 | Walter [ | 1 | 13 | F | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 59 | Yeung [ | 1 | 3 | M | Optic pathway glioma |
| NA | NA |
| 60 | Chmara [ | 1 | 11 | M | Anaplastic oligodendroglioma |
| NA | NA |
| 61 | 2 | 4 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 62 | 3 | 9 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 63 | 4 | 4 | F | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 64 | Bakry [ | 1 | 5 | NS | Pleomorphic xantho-astrocytoma |
| PMS2– | NS |
| 65 | 2 | 8 | NS | GBM |
| MSH6– | NS | |
| 66 | 3 | 11 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | NS | |
| 67 | 4 | 13 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | NS | |
| 68 | 5 | 4 | NS | GBM |
| NA | NS | |
| 60 | 6 | 21 | NS | Oligodendroglioma |
| NA | NS | |
| 70 | 7 | 24 | NS | GBM |
| NA | NS | |
| 71 | 8 | 10 | NS | Anaplastic oligodendroglioma |
| MSH6– | NS | |
| 72 | 9 | 11 | NS | Anaplastic astrocytoma |
| MSH6– | NS | |
| 73 | 10 | 17 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | NS | |
| 74 | 11 | 12 | NS | GBM |
| NA | NS | |
| 75 | 12 | 8 | NS | GBM | NA | PMS2– | NS | |
| 76 | 13 | 9 | NS | GBM | NA | PMS2– | NS | |
| 77 | 14 | 4 | NS | GBM | NA | PMS2– | NS | |
| 78 | 15 | 16 | NS | Anaplastic astrocytoma | NA | PMS2– | NS | |
| 79 | 16 | 11 | NS | Pleomorphic xantho-astrocytoma | NA | PMS2– | NS | |
| 80 | Bougeard [ | 1 | 11 | F | GBM |
| * PMS2– | *MSI-H |
| 81 | 2 | 9 | M | GBM |
| * PMS2– | *MSI-H | |
| 82 | Daou [ | 1 | 22 | F | Anaplastic ganglioglioma |
|
| NA |
| 83 | Lavoine [ | 1 | 21 | NS | Ganglioglioma |
| PMS2– | MSI-H |
| 84 | 2 | 40 | NS | Glioblastoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 85 | 3 | 11 | NS | Glioblastoma |
| # MLH1-/PMS2- | MSI-H | |
| 86 | 4 | 6 | NS | GBM |
| # MLH1-/PMS2- | MSS | |
| 87 | 5 | 13 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | NA | |
| 88 | 6 | 22 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | MSI-H | |
| 89 | 7 | 32 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | MSI-H | |
| 90 | 8 | 34 | NS | GBM |
| PMS2– | MSI-H | |
| 91 | 9 | 6 | NS | Spinal GBM |
| PMS2– | NA | |
| 92 | 10 | 6 | NS | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 93 | 11 | 5 | NS | Medulloblastoma |
| # MLH1–/PMS2– | MSS | |
| 94 | 12 | 5 | NS | Oligodendroglioma |
| # MLH1–/PMS2– | MSS | |
| 95 | 13 | 6 | NS | GBM |
| MSH6– | MSS | |
| 96 | 14 | 9 | NS | Astrocytoma |
| MSH6+ | MSS | |
| 97 | 15 | 14 | NS | GBM |
| # MSH2–/MSH6– | MSS | |
| 98 | Nguyen [ | 1 | 6 | F | Medulloblastoma |
| § MLH1–/PMS2- | MSI-H (TP53, D17S250, D2S123, D5S346) |
| 99 | 2 | 5 | M | Glioma IV |
| § MLH1-/PMS2- | MSI-H (TP53, D17S250, D2S123,D5S2013) | |
| 100 | 3 | 5 | M | Brain tumor |
| NA | NA | |
| 101 | Maletzki [ | 1 | 11 | F | Anaplastic astrocytoma |
| NA | MSI-H (BAT25, BAT26, Cat25, Bat40, NR24, MRPL2, TP53, DAMS) |
| 102 | 2 | 10 | M | GBM |
| NA | MSI-H (BAT25, BAT26, Cat25, Bat40, NR24, TP53, DAMS) | |
| 103 | 3 | 4 | F | GBM |
| NA | MSI-H (BAT25, BAT26, Cat25, Bat40, NR21, NR24, NR27, MRPL2, TP53, DAMS) | |
| 104 | Taeubner [ | 1 | 13 | F | Medulloblastoma |
| MSH6 + | NA |
| 105 | AlHarbi [ | 1 | 5 | F | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 106 | Baig [ | 1 | 11 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 107 | 2 | 9 | F | PNET, astrocytoma | NA | NA | NA | |
| 108 | 3 | 5 | M | PNET | NA | NA | NA | |
| 109 | 4 | 1 | M | PNET | NA | NA | NA | |
| 110 | 5 | 7 | M | GBM |
| NA | NA | |
| 111 | 6 | 9 | F | PNET, astrocytoma |
| NA | NA | |
| 112 | Bush [ | 1 | 27 | F | GBM |
| NA | NA |
| 113 | Farah [ | 1 | 10 | M | High-grade Glioma |
| PMS2– | NA |
| 114 | 2 | 22 | F | GBM |
| PMS2– | NA | |
| 115 | 3 | 10 | M | Medulloblastoma |
| PMS2- | NA | |
| 116 | 4 | 12 | F | Brain tumor |
| PMS2- | NA | |
| 117 | Current study | 1 | 7 | M | GBM |
| MSH6- | MSS |
| 118 | 2 | 4 | M | Malignant astrocytoma |
| MSH6- | MSI-L (NR27) |
Abbreviations: IHC, immunohistochemistry; MSI, microsatellite instability; GBM, glioblastoma multiforme; NA, not analyzed; NS, not specified; MSI-H, microsatellite instability, high grade; MSI-L, microsatellite instability, low grade; MSS, microsatellite instability, stable; § MLH1, staining loss in tumor cells but not in non-neoplastic cells. # IHC, immunohistochemical pattern not specified; *, results from Lavoine et al., [59].
Phenotypic features of patients who did not meet criteria for MMR IHC screening or had IHC false-negative results.
| Case ID | Reference (Number) | Reason for Non-Selection by | Malignancies (Age at Diagnosis) | Others | Points * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 37 | Senter [ | Age at brain tumor diagnosis | Glioma (35) Rectum (24) Endometrial (35) | Brother: CRC (26), glioblastoma (34) Brother: Glioma (24) | 5 |
| 46 | Herkert [ | Age at brain tumor diagnosis | GBM (34) CRC (21) Duodenal (32) Jejunal (×2) (34) | CR polyps (11) GI polyps with dysplasia (21 and 32), congenital asplenia, left isomerism, ventricle septum defect | 6 |
| 84 | Levoine [ | Age at brain tumor diagnosis | Glioblastoma (40)CRC (22 and 32) | Polyps (38) CALMs LS family | 5 |
| 89 | Levoine [ | Age at brain tumor diagnosis | GBM (32) CRC (20)Gastric (32) | Polyps (20) | 3 |
| 90 | Levoine [ | Age at brain tumor diagnosis | GBM (34) CRC (22 and 25) Endometrial (35) Small-bowel (36) | Polyps (22) Consanguinity LS family | 4 |
| 112 | Bush [ | Age at brain tumor diagnosis | GBM (27) | Multiple polyps (23) CALMs Sister: 2 adenomas and 1 with high-grade dysplasia (21) breast cancer (29) LS family | 3 |
| 42 | Sjursen [ | PMS2+ | Giant cell glioblastoma (10) CRC (20) Duodenal (26) Ileal (30 and 36) Endometrial (31) Jejunal (42) | Polyps Sister: CRC (16)Father: Gastric cancer (64) | 4 |
| 7 | Menko [ | MSH6+ | Oligodendroglioma (10) CRC (12) | CALMs Consanguinity | 8 |
| 96 | Levoine [ | MSH6+ | Astrocytoma (9) | CALMs | 4 |
| 104 | Taeubner [ | MSH6+ | Medulloblastoma (13) | CALMs Other skin lesions reminiscent of NF1 | 4 |
Abbreviations: CR, colorectal; CRC, colorectal carcinoma; GI, gastrointestinal; GBM, glioblastoma multiforme; CALMs, café-au-lait macules, LS, Lynch syndrome; *, according to C4CMMRD clinical scoring system [3]; NF1, neurofibromatosis type 1.