- Cheng, Donavan T;
- Prasad, Meera;
- Chekaluk, Yvonne;
- Benayed, Ryma;
- Sadowska, Justyna;
- Zehir, Ahmet;
- Syed, Aijazuddin;
- Wang, Yan Elsa;
- Somar, Joshua;
- Li, Yirong;
- Yelskaya, Zarina;
- Wong, Donna;
- Robson, Mark E;
- Offit, Kenneth;
- Berger, Michael F;
- Nafa, Khedoudja;
- Ladanyi, Marc;
- Zhang, Liying
Background
The growing number of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) tests is transforming the routine clinical diagnosis of hereditary cancers. Identifying whether a cancer is the result of an underlying disease-causing mutation in a cancer predisposition gene is not only diagnostic for a cancer predisposition syndrome, but also has significant clinical implications in the clinical management of patients and their families.Methods
Here, we evaluated the performance of MSK-IMPACT (Memorial Sloan Kettering-Integrated Mutation Profiling of Actionable Cancer Targets) in detecting genetic alterations in 76 genes implicated in cancer predisposition syndromes. Output from hybridization-based capture was sequenced on an Illumina HiSeq 2500. A custom analysis pipeline was used to detect single nucleotide variants (SNVs), small insertions/deletions (indels) and copy number variants (CNVs).Results
MSK-IMPACT detected all germline variants in a set of 233 unique patient DNA samples, previously confirmed by previous single gene testing. Reproducibility of variant calls was demonstrated using inter- and intra- run replicates. Moreover, in 16 samples, we identified additional pathogenic mutations other than those previously identified through a traditional gene-by-gene approach, including founder mutations in BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2 and APC, and truncating mutations in TP53, TSC2, ATM and VHL.Conclusions
This study highlights the importance of the NGS-based gene panel testing approach in comprehensively identifying germline variants contributing to cancer predisposition and simultaneous detection of somatic and germline alterations.