PALB2 Variants Extend the Mutational Profile of Hungarian Patients with Breast and Ovarian Cancer

Butz, Henriett ✉ [Butz, Henriett (orvostudomány), author] National Institute of Oncology; Department of Laboratory Medicine (SU / FM / I); MTA-SE Research Group for Hereditary Tumors (SU / FM / I / DLM); Nagy, Petra [Nagy, Petra (orvostudomány, kl...), author] National Institute of Oncology; Papp, János [Papp, János (molekuláris genetika), author] National Institute of Oncology; Bozsik, Anikó [Bozsik, Anikó (Molekuláris bioló...), author] National Institute of Oncology; MTA-SE Research Group for Hereditary Tumors (SU / FM / I / DLM); Grolmusz, Vince Kornél [Grolmusz, Vince Kornél (orvostudomány), author] National Institute of Oncology; MTA-SE Research Group for Hereditary Tumors (SU / FM / I / DLM); Pócza, Tímea [Pócza, Tímea (Biológus), author] National Institute of Oncology; Oláh, Edit [Oláh, Edit (molekuláris onkol...), author] National Institute of Oncology; Patócs, Attila [Patócs, Attila Balázs (Orvostudomány), author] National Institute of Oncology; Department of Laboratory Medicine (SU / FM / I); MTA-SE Research Group for Hereditary Tumors (SU / FM / I / DLM)

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: CANCERS 2072-6694 15 (17) Paper: 4350 , 15 p. 2023
  • SJR Scopus - Oncology: Q1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • Hungarian Scientific Research Grant(NRDI FK135065)
  • New National Excellence Program of the Ministry of Human Capacities(UNKP-22-5-SE-1)
  • (Bolyai Research Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
  • National Laboratories Excellence program (under the National Tumor Biology Laboratory Project(NLP-17)
Background: The pathogenic/likely pathogenic (P/LP) variant detection rate and profile of PALB2, the third most important breast cancer gene, may vary between different populations. Methods: PALB2 was analyzed in peripheral blood samples of three independent cohorts: prospectively between September 2021 and March 2023 (i) in 1280 consecutive patients with breast and/or ovarian cancer (HBOC), (ii) in 568 patients with other cancers (controls), and retrospectively, (iii) in 191 young breast cancer (<33 years, yBC) patients. These data were compared with data of 134,187 non-cancer individuals retrieved from the Genome Aggregation Database. Results: Altogether, 235 cases (235/1280; 18.3%) carried at least one P/LP variant in one of the HBOC susceptibility genes. P/LP PALB2 variants were identified in 18 patients (1.4%; 18/1280) in the HBOC and 3 cases (1.5%; 3/191) in the yBC group. In the control group, only one patient had a disease-causing PALB2 variant (0.17%; 1/568) as a secondary finding not related to the disease, which was similar (0.15%; 205/134,187) in the non-cancer control group. The NM_024675.4:c.509_510delGA variant was the most common among our patients (33%; 6/18). We did not find a significant difference in the incidence of PALB2 disease-causing variants according to age; however, the median age of tumor onset was lower in PALB2 P/LP carriers versus wild-type patients (44 vs. 48 years). In our cohort, the odds ratio for breast cancer risk in women with PALB2 P/LP variants was between 8.1 and 9.3 compared to non-HBOC cancer patients and the non-cancer population, respectively. Conclusions: PALB2 P/LP variants are not uncommon among breast and/or ovarian cancer patients. Their incidence was the same in the two breast cancer cohorts studied but may occur rarely in patients with non-breast/ovarian cancer. The c.509_510delGA variant is particularly common in the studied Hungarian patient population.
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2025-04-02 00:24