| Literature DB >> 35101071 |
Kortbeek Koen1, De Putter Robin2, Naert Eline3.
Abstract
We report the case of a breast cancer survivor, diagnosed with an underlying CHEK2 c.1100delC heterozygosity, who developed a papillary thyroid cancer 5 years later. A CHEK2 c.1100delC (likely) pathogenic variant is associated with an increased risk of breast, prostate and colorectal cancer and therefore risk-specific screening will be offered. Current national and international screening guidelines do not recommend routine screening for thyroid cancer. Hence, we reviewed the literature to explore the possible association between a CHEK2 mutation and thyroid cancer. A weak association was found between the various CHEK2 mutations and papillary thyroid cancer. The evidence for an association with CHEK2 c.1100delC in particular is the least robust. In conclusion, there is insufficient evidence to warrant systematic thyroid screening in CHEK2 carriers.Entities:
Keywords: Breast Cancer; CHEK2; CHEK2 c.1100delC; Papillary thyroid Cancer; Thyroid Cancer screening
Year: 2022 PMID: 35101071 PMCID: PMC8802479 DOI: 10.1186/s13053-022-00211-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hered Cancer Clin Pract ISSN: 1731-2302 Impact factor: 2.857
Fig. 1Case pedigree. Proband indicated with arrow
Fig. 2Simplified ATM-CHEK2-BRCA1 pathway. In the presence of double strand DNA breaks, sensor protein complexes activate ATM. ATM leads to phosphorylation of CHEK2 and p53 stabilization. CHEK2 also phosphorylates p53 and several other proteins contributing to p53 dependent cell cycle arrest, which lead to apoptosis. CHEK2 activates BRCA1 and other regulators by phosphorylation, leading to the formation of homologous recombination repair complexes. Image courtesy of author
Fig. 3CHEK 2 protein domains. Lollipops indicate sites of founder mutations (black: truncating; white: missense). (SCD: SQ/TQ cluster domain; FHA: forkhead-associated domain; KD: kinase domain). Image courtesy of author
Fig. 4Search Strategy Diagram
Prevalence of CHEK2 mutation in patients with thyroid cancer versus healthy controls based on case-control series. (NA: no data available; OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval)
| Author | Population | Tumor Type | Investigated Gene Variant | Carrier Frequency in thyroid cancer patients | Carrier Frequency in healthy controls | OR | 95%-CI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cybulski et al. (7) | Polish | Papillary thyroid | c.1100delC | 1/173 | (0,57%) | 10/4000 | (0,25%) | 2,3 | [NA] | 0,9 |
| c.444 + 1G > A | 5/173 | (2,89%) | 19/4000 | (0,48%) | 6,2 | [NA] | 0,0003 | |||
| c.470 T > C | 15/173 | (8,67%) | 192/4000 | (4,80%) | 1,9 | [NA] | 0,04 | |||
| Siołek et al. (8) | Polish | Papillary thyroid | c.1100delC | 1/468 | (0,21%) | 0/468 | (0,00%) | NA | [NA] | NA |
| c.444 + 1G > A | 10/468 | (2,14%) | 1/468 | (0,20%) | 10 | [1,3 – 78,1] | 0,03 | |||
| c.470 T > C | 60/468 | (12,82%) | 25/468 | (5,30%) | 2,8 | [0,6 – 14,8] | 0,001 | |||
| c.27417113-27422508del | 6/468 | (1,28%) | 2/468 | (0,40%) | 3.0 | [1,7-4, 6] | 0,2 | |||
| Fayaz et al. (15) | Iranian | Non anaplastic thyroid | c.444 + 1G > A | 0/100 | (0%) | 0/ 100 | (0,00%) | NA | [NA] | NA |
| c.470 T > C | 0/100 | (0%) | 0/ 100 | (0,00%) | NA | [NA] | NA | |||
| Wojcicka et al. (16) | Polish | Papillary thyroid | c.470 T > C | 169/1700 | (9,94%) | 98/2056 | (4,70%) | 2,2 | [1,71 – 2,86] | < 0,0001 |
| Kaczmarek-Rys et al. (17) | Polish | Papillary and follicular thyroid | c.470 T > C | 51/602 | (4,49%) | 42/829 | (2,53%) | 1,8 | [1,20 – 2,72] | 0,004 |
| Gąsior-Perczak et al. (14) | Polish | Papillary thyroid | c.470 T > C | 189/1547 | (12,3%) | 25/468 | (5,30%) | 2,5 | [2,47 – 3,79] | < 0,001 |
| c.1100delC | 16/1547 | (1,00%) | 0/468 | (0,00%) | NA | [NA] | NA | |||
| c.444 + 1G > A | 18/1547 | (1,20%) | 1/468 | (0,20%) | 7,1 | [0,95 – 52,31] | 0,056 | |||
| c.27417113-27422508del | 10/1547 | (0,60%) | 2/468 | (0,40%) | 2,1 | [0,48 -9,40] | 0,319 | |||