Abstract

Multiple primary cancers, defined as three or more primary tumours, are rare, and there are few genetic studies concerning them. There is a need for increased knowledge on the heritability of multiple primary cancers and genotype-phenotype correlations. We have performed whole-genome/exome sequencing (WGS/WES) in ten individuals with three or more primary tumours, with no previous findings on standard clinical genetic investigations. In one individual with a clinical diagnosis of MEN1, a likely pathogenic cryptic splice site variant was detected in the MEN1 gene. The variant (c.654C > A) is synonymous but we showed in a cDNA analysis that it affects splicing and leads to a frameshift, with the theoretical new amino acid sequence p.(Gly219Glufs*13). In one individual with metachronous colorectal cancers, ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, we found a likely pathogenic variant in the MLH1 gene (c.27G > A), and two risk factor variants in the genes CHEK2 and HOXB13. The MLH1 variant is synonymous but has previously been shown to be associated to constitutional low-grade hypermethylation of the MLH1 promoter, and segregates with disease in families with colorectal and endometrial cancer. No pathogenic single nucleotide or structural variants were detected in the remaining eight individuals in the study. The pathogenic variants found by WGS/WES were in genes already sequenced by Sanger sequencing and WES in the clinic, without any findings. We conclude that, in individuals with an unequivocal clinical diagnosis of a specific hereditary cancer syndrome, where standard clinical testing failed to detect a causative variant, re-analysis may lead to a diagnosis.

Highlights

  • Cancer is the second most common killer and accounts for 16% of all deaths [1]

  • We offer genetic screening based on the combination of cancer types within the family

  • Participant A had metachronous cancers in the colon, ovaries, and uterus, with her first cancer at the age of 30. Her father had colorectal cancer at the age of 76. This is highly suggestive of Lynch syndrome or Lynch-like syndrome

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is the second most common killer and accounts for 16% of all deaths [1]. In Sweden, the most common types of cancer are prostate cancer, breast cancer, and non-melanoma skin cancer [2]. The risk of a second cancer in individuals who have already had one is higher than in the general population [3]. Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) and the International Association of Cancer Registries (IACR) as two or more histologically distinct tumours, not caused by metastasis, recurrence, or local spread, and diagnosed in the same individual [4, 5]. In Sweden, 3% of all tumours registered between 2014 and 2018 were the third tumour discovered in that individual. It is important to note, that those are not necessarily primary tumours, since the numbers include recurrences

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