Abstract
Gastric cancer is considered to be the fifth highest incident tumor worldwide and the third leading cause of cancer deaths. Developing regions report a higher number of sporadic cases, but there are only a few local studies related to hereditary cases of gastric cancer in Brazil to confirm this fact. CDH1 germline mutations have been described both in familial and sporadic cases, but there is only one recent molecular description of individuals from Brazil. In this study we performed Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) to assess CDH1 germline mutations in individuals who match the clinical criteria for Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer (HDGC), or who exhibit very early diagnosis of gastric cancer. Among five probands we detected CDH1 germline mutations in two cases (40%). The mutation c.1023T > G was found in a HDGC family and the mutation c.1849G > A, which is nearly exclusive to African populations, was found in an early-onset case of gastric adenocarcinoma. The mutations described highlight the existence of gastric cancer cases caused by CDH1 germline mutations in northern Brazil, although such information is frequently ignored due to the existence of a large number of environmental factors locally. Our report represent the first CDH1 mutations in HDGC described from Brazil by an NGS platform.
Highlights
Gastric cancer was considered to be the fifth highest incident tumor in both genders worldwide in 2012 and the third leading cause of cancer deaths (8.8% of the total)
The gene related to the gastric cancer predisposition syndrome (Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer - HDGC) is CDH1 which encodes the E-cadherin protein, responsible for cell adhesion in non-neural epithelial cells, among other functions
Germline mutations of this gene as a cause of familial cases of diffuse gastric cancer were first described in the Maori tribe in New Zealand, in which the existence of a genetic syndrome predisposing to gastric cancer was first detected (Guilford et al, 1998, 1999; Blair et al, 2013)
Summary
Gastric cancer was considered to be the fifth highest incident tumor in both genders worldwide in 2012 and the third leading cause of cancer deaths (8.8% of the total). The gene related to the gastric cancer predisposition syndrome (Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer - HDGC) is CDH1 which encodes the E-cadherin protein, responsible for cell adhesion in non-neural epithelial cells, among other functions. Germline mutations of this gene as a cause of familial cases of diffuse gastric cancer were first described in the Maori tribe in New Zealand, in which the existence of a genetic syndrome predisposing to gastric cancer was first detected (Guilford et al, 1998, 1999; Blair et al, 2013)
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