Abstract

The diagnosis of cancer predisposition in pediatric patients with cancer is vital for treatment decisions, surveillance, and management of at-risk family members. Somatic tumor testing can identify potential underlying constitutional variants that confer increased cancer risk. Here, we report the characteristics of constitutional variants identified through tumor testing. Data were abstracted from medical record review of 1,023 patients who received inhouse somatic tumor testing over a 28-month period. Patients were identified for testing using referral criteria developed as a collaboration between genomic diagnostics, pathology, and oncology. Characteristics of patients who underwent constitutional testing, including family history and variant loss of heterozygosity, were tracked. From 1,023 patients who underwent somatic tumor sequencing in a 28-month period, 210 variants were identified in 141 patients (13.8%) that were concerning for cancer predisposition syndromes requiring intervention. A total of 73 variants in 41 patients have undergone clinical confirmatory testing thus far. Of these, 26 variants were confirmed to be constitutionally present (35.6%). Among patients tested, 23 (56.1%) of 41 total patients were diagnosed with a cancer predisposition syndrome. Our data demonstrate that more than one third of variants in tumor somatic sequencing that were concerning for underlying cancer predisposition were constitutionally confirmed. Overall, somatic tumor testing identified potential cancer predisposition syndromes in pediatric patients, and some would not have been identified on the basis of clinical history alone.

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