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PALB2, CHEK2 and ATM rare variants and cancer risk: data from COGS

Authors :
Southey, Melissa C
Goldgar, David E
Winqvist, Robert
Pylkäs, Katri
Couch, Fergus
Tischkowitz, Marc
Foulkes, William D
Dennis, Joe
Michailidou, Kyriaki
van Rensburg, Elizabeth J
Heikkinen, Tuomas
Nevanlinna, Heli
Hopper, John L
Dörk, Thilo
Claes, Kathleen Bm
Reis-Filho, Jorge
Teo, Zhi Ling
Radice, Paolo
Catucci, Irene
Peterlongo, Paolo
Tsimiklis, Helen
Odefrey, Fabrice A
Dowty, James G
Schmidt, Marjanka K
Broeks, Annegien
Hogervorst, Frans B
Verhoef, Senno
Carpenter, Jane
Clarke, Christine
Scott, Rodney J
Fasching, Peter A
Haeberle, Lothar
Ekici, Arif B
Beckmann, Matthias W
Peto, Julian
Dos-Santos-Silva, Isabel
Fletcher, Olivia
Johnson, Nichola
Bolla, Manjeet K
Sawyer, Elinor J
Tomlinson, Ian
Kerin, Michael J
Miller, Nicola
Marme, Federik
Burwinkel, Barbara
Yang, Rongxi
Guénel, Pascal
Truong, Thérèse
Menegaux, Florence
Sanchez, Marie
Bojesen, Stig
Nielsen, Sune F
Flyger, Henrik
Benitez, Javier
Zamora, M Pilar
Perez, Jose Ignacio Arias
Menéndez, Primitiva
Anton-Culver, Hoda
Neuhausen, Susan
Ziogas, Argyrios
Clarke, Christina A
Brenner, Hermann
Arndt, Volker
Stegmaier, Christa
Brauch, Hiltrud
Brüning, Thomas
Ko, Yon-Dschun
Muranen, Taru A
Aittomäki, Kristiina
Blomqvist, Carl
Bogdanova, Natalia V
Antonenkova, Natalia N
Lindblom, Annika
Margolin, Sara
Mannermaa, Arto
Kataja, Vesa
Kosma, Veli-Matti
Hartikainen, Jaana M
Spurdle, Amanda B
Investigators, kConFab
Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group
Wauters, Els
Smeets, Dominiek
Beuselinck, Benoit
Floris, Giuseppe
Chang-Claude, Jenny
Rudolph, Anja
Seibold, Petra
Flesch-Janys, Dieter
Olson, Janet E
Vachon, Celine
Pankratz, Vernon S
McLean, Catriona
Haiman, Christopher A
Henderson, Brian E
Schumacher, Fredrick
Le Marchand, Loic
Kristensen, Vessela
Alnæs, Grethe Grenaker
Zheng, Wei
Source :
Journal of medical genetics, vol 53, iss 12
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2016.

Abstract

BackgroundThe rarity of mutations in PALB2, CHEK2 and ATM make it difficult to estimate precisely associated cancer risks. Population-based family studies have provided evidence that at least some of these mutations are associated with breast cancer risk as high as those associated with rare BRCA2 mutations. We aimed to estimate the relative risks associated with specific rare variants in PALB2, CHEK2 and ATM via a multicentre case-control study.MethodsWe genotyped 10 rare mutations using the custom iCOGS array: PALB2 c.1592delT, c.2816T>G and c.3113G>A, CHEK2 c.349A>G, c.538C>T, c.715G>A, c.1036C>T, c.1312G>T, and c.1343T>G and ATM c.7271T>G. We assessed associations with breast cancer risk (42 671 cases and 42 164 controls), as well as prostate (22 301 cases and 22 320 controls) and ovarian (14 542 cases and 23 491 controls) cancer risk, for each variant.ResultsFor European women, strong evidence of association with breast cancer risk was observed for PALB2 c.1592delT OR 3.44 (95% CI 1.39 to 8.52, p=7.1×10-5), PALB2 c.3113G>A OR 4.21 (95% CI 1.84 to 9.60, p=6.9×10-8) and ATM c.7271T>G OR 11.0 (95% CI 1.42 to 85.7, p=0.0012). We also found evidence of association with breast cancer risk for three variants in CHEK2, c.349A>G OR 2.26 (95% CI 1.29 to 3.95), c.1036C>T OR 5.06 (95% CI 1.09 to 23.5) and c.538C>T OR 1.33 (95% CI 1.05 to 1.67) (p≤0.017). Evidence for prostate cancer risk was observed for CHEK2 c.1343T>G OR 3.03 (95% CI 1.53 to 6.03, p=0.0006) for African men and CHEK2 c.1312G>T OR 2.21 (95% CI 1.06 to 4.63, p=0.030) for European men. No evidence of association with ovarian cancer was found for any of these variants.ConclusionsThis report adds to accumulating evidence that at least some variants in these genes are associated with an increased risk of breast cancer that is clinically important.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of medical genetics, vol 53, iss 12
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..21ff44216183dd8e4ae3c1da59cc1e14