Clinical Utility of Functional RNA Analysis for the Reclassification of Splicing Gene Variants in Hereditary Cancer.

Journal: Cancer Genomics & Proteomics
Published:
Abstract

Background: Classification of splicing variants (SVs) in genes associated with hereditary cancer is often challenging. The aim of this study was to investigate the occurrence of SVs in hereditary cancer genes and the clinical utility of RNA analysis.

Methods: 1518 individuals were tested for cancer predisposition, using a Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) panel of 36 genes. Splicing variant analysis was performed using RT-PCR and Sanger Sequencing.

Results: In total, 34 different SVs were identified, 53% of which were classified as pathogenic or likely pathogenic. The remaining 16 variants were initially classified as Variant of Uncertain Significance (VUS). RNA analysis was performed for 3 novel variants.

Conclusions: The RNA analysis assisted in the reclassification of 20% of splicing variants from VUS to pathogenic. RNA analysis is essential in the case of uncharacterized splicing variants, for proper classification and personalized management of these patients.

Authors
Konstantinos Agiannitopoulos, Georgia Pepe, Eirini Papadopoulou, Georgios Tsaousis, Stavroula Kampouri, Sonia Maravelaki, Athanassios Fassas, Christos Christodoulou, Rodoniki Iosifidou, Sofia Karageorgopoulou, Christos Markopoulos, Ioannis Natsiopoulos, Konstantinos Papazisis, Maria Vasilaki Antonatou, Vassileios Venizelos, Vahit Ozmen, Sualp Tansan, Kerim Kaban, Dan Eniu, Angelica Chiorean, George Nasioulas