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Copy Number Variations (CNVs) Account for 10.8% of Pathogenic Variants in Patients Referred for Hereditary Cancer Testing.

Authors :
AGIANNITOPOULOS, KONSTANTINOS
PEPE, GEORGIA
TSAOUSIS, GEORGIOS N.
POTSKA, KEVISA
BOUZARELOU, DIMITRA
KATSELI, ANASTASIA
NTOGKA, CHRISTINA
MEINTANI, ANGELIKI
TSOULOS, NIKOLAOS
GIASSAS, STYLIANOS
VENIZELOS, VASSILEIOS
MARKOPOULOS, CHRISTOS
IOSIFIDOU, RODONIKI
KARAGEORGOPOULOU, SOFIA
CHRISTODOULOU, CHRISTOS
NATSIOPOULOS, IOANNIS
PAPAZISIS, KONSTANTINOS
VASILAKI-ANTONATOU, MARIA
KABLETSAS, ELEFTHERIOS
PSYRRI, AMANTA
Source :
Cancer Genomics & Proteomics (1109-6535); Sep/Oct2023, Vol. 20 Issue 5, p448-455, 8p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background/Aim: Germline copy number variation (CNV) is a type of genetic variant that predisposes significantly to inherited cancers. Today, next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have contributed to multi gene panel analysis in clinical practice. Materials and Methods: A total of 2,163 patients were screened for cancer susceptibility, using a solution-based capture method. A panel of 52 genes was used for targeted NGS. The capture-based approach enables computational analysis of CNVs from NGS data. We studied the performance of the CNV module of the commercial software suite SeqPilot (JSI Medical Systems) and of the non-commercial tool panelcn.MOPS. Additionally, we tested the performance of digital multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (digitalMLPA). Results: Pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants (P/LP) were identified in 464 samples (21.5%). CNV accounts for 10.8% (50/464) of pathogenic variants, referring to deletion/duplication of one or more exons of a gene. In patients with breast and ovarian cancer, CNVs accounted for 10.2% and 6.8% of pathogenic variants, respectively. In colorectal cancer patients, CNV accounted for 28.6% of pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants. Conclusion: In silico CNV detection tools provide a viable and cost-effective method to identify CNVs from NGS experiments. CNVs constitute a substantial percentage of P/LP variants, since they represent up to one of every ten P/LP findings identified by NGS multigene analysis; therefore, their evaluation is highly recommended to improve the diagnostic yield of hereditary cancer analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11096535
Volume :
20
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cancer Genomics & Proteomics (1109-6535)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171863319
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21873/cgp.20396