Abstract

BackgroundFamilial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is an autosomal dominant colorectal tumor characterized by numerous adenomatous colonic polyps that often lead to colon cancer. Although most patients with FAP harbored germline mutations in APC gene, it was recently recognized that patients with clinical FAP, but without detectable pathogenic mutations, could be associated with somatic mosaic APC mutation.MethodsWe reanalyzed the nest-generation sequencing (NGS) gene panel testing results of patients who were diagnosed with FAP, but did not have APC mutations, at Yonsei Cancer Prevention Center between July 2016 and March 2018. We tested several variant calling algorithms to identify low level mosaic variants. In one patient with a low frequency APC mutation, NGS analysis was performed together with endoscopic biopsy. Variant calling tools HaplotypeCaller, MuTect2, VarScan2, and Pindel were used. We also used 3′-Modified Oligonucleotides (MEMO)-PCR or conventional PCR for confirmation.ResultsAmong 28 patients with clinical suspicion of FAP but no detectable pathogenic variants of colonic polyposis associated genes, somatic mosaic pathogenic variants were identified in seven patients. The variant allele frequency ranged from 0.3 to 7.7%. These variants were mostly detected through variant caller MuTect2 and Pindel, and were further confirmed using mutant enrichment with MEMO-PCR.ConclusionsThe NGS with an adequate combination of bioinformatics tools is effective to detect low level somatic variants in a single assay. Because mosaic APC mutations are more frequent than previously thought, the presence of mosaic mutations must be considered when analyzing genetic tests of patients with FAP.

Highlights

  • Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is an autosomal dominant colorectal tumor characterized by numerous adenomatous colonic polyps that often lead to colon cancer

  • Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP, OMIM#175100) is an autosomal dominant colorectal tumor syndrome characterized by numerous adenomatous colonic polyps that are prone to progress to colon cancer

  • Patients and nest-generation sequencing (NGS) statistics There were 53 patients with a clinical diagnosis of FAP, and 25 pathogenic variants in APC were discovered by NGS for hereditary cancer panel using HaplotypeCaller

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Summary

Introduction

Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is an autosomal dominant colorectal tumor characterized by numerous adenomatous colonic polyps that often lead to colon cancer. Most patients with FAP harbored germline mutations in APC gene, it was recently recognized that patients with clinical FAP, but without detectable pathogenic mutations, could be associated with somatic mosaic APC mutation. Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP, OMIM#175100) is an autosomal dominant colorectal tumor syndrome characterized by numerous adenomatous colonic polyps that are prone to progress to colon cancer. The majority of patients with FAP harbor a germline mutation in the APC gene on chromosome 5q21. It has been widely recognized that some of these sporadic FAP patients have somatic mosaic APC mutations [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. A small fraction of mosaic mutations are missed in routine genetic analyses optimized for germline variants, partly due to limited sensitivity of the testing method

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