TP53 missense allele predisposing to high risk of breast cancer but not pediatric cancers.

Journal: Journal Of The National Cancer Institute
Published:
Abstract

Pathogenic TP53 germline variants cause young-onset breast cancer and other cancers of the Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) spectrum, but the clinical consequences of partial-loss-of function TP53 variants are incompletely understood. In the consecutive cohort of Palestinian breast cancer patients of the Middle East Breast Cancer Study (MEBCS), breast cancer risk among TP53 p.R181C heterozygotes was 50% by age 50 years and 81% by age 80 years. In contrast, prevalence of pediatric cancers in the MEBCS was similar among first-degree relatives of TP53 p.R181C carriers (3/519 = 0.0058) and first-degree relatives of MEBCS patients with no pathogenic germline variant in any known breast cancer gene (7/1082 = 0.0065; odds ratio [OR] = 0.90, 95% confidence interval [CI] [0.23 to 3.49], Fisher P = .90 [2-tailed]). This result suggests that in families harboring this TP53 allele, genetic testing in children is unwarranted, and screening children for LFS tumors is unnecessary. More generally, some TP53 missense alleles can predispose to very high risk of breast cancer without pleiotropic effects.

Authors
Suhair Lolas Hamameh, Sari Lieberman, Alaa Sarahneh, Tom Walsh, Ming Lee, Suleyman Gulsuner, Grace Rabie, Rachel Beeri, Amal Aburayyan, Jessica Mandell, Hila Fridman, Galit Lazer Derbeko, Tehila Klopstock, Orit Freireich, Amnon Lahad, Mary-claire King, Ephrat Levy Lahad, Moien Kanaan