Abstract

AbstractWaldenström macroglobulinemia (WM) is a rare hematological malignancy. Risk for WM is elevated 20-fold among first-degree relatives of patients with WM. However, the list of variants and genes that cause WM remains incomplete. In this study we analyzed exomes from 64 WM pedigrees for evidence of genetic susceptibility for this malignancy. We determined the frequency of pathogenic (P) or likely pathogenic (LP) variants among patients with WM; performed variant- and gene-level association analyses with the set of 166 WM cases and 681 unaffected controls; and examined the segregation pattern of deleterious variants among affected members in each pedigree. We identified P variants in TREX1 and SAMHD1 (genes that function at the interface between innate immune response, genotoxic surveillance, and DNA repair) segregating in patients with WM from 2 pedigrees. There were additional P/LP variants in cancer-predisposing genes (eg, POT1, RECQL4, PTPN11, PMS2). In variant- and gene-level analyses, no associations were statistically significant after multiple testing correction. On a pathway level, we observed involvement of genes that play a role in telomere maintenance (q-value = 0.02), regulation of innate immune response (q-value = 0.05), and DNA repair (q-value = 0.08). Affected members of each pedigree shared multiple deleterious variants (median, n = 18) but the overlap between the families was modest. In summary, P/LP variants in highly penetrant genes constitute a modest proportion of the deleterious variants, each pedigree is largely unique in its genetic architecture, and multiple genes are likely involved in the etiology of WM.

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