Abstract 1783P
Background
TP53 is the primary gene associated with sarcoma predisposition. Most studies have focused on the pediatric population, leaving a gap in fully understanding the genetic determinants in the adult sarcoma population.
Methods
Among adult sarcoma patients who underwent genetic counseling between January 2020 and December 2023 at Cochin Hospital (Paris, France), a NETSARC + reference center for sarcoma patients, we collected characteristics of those who had germline analysis. This included the presence of a germline variant in a panel of 27 genes, and patients characteristics (age, sex, histology, and stage of sarcoma, personal and familial cancer history).
Results
Among 205 sarcoma patients who had a genetic consultation, 122 had germline analysis based on their personal and familial history. 57/122 (47%) were male, 80 (66%) had soft tissue sarcoma (STS), 42 (34%) had bone sarcoma (BS). The median age at sarcoma diagnosis was 44 years old (yo) (IQR 29-60). The main STS histology was undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (n= 15), the main BS was chondrosarcoma (n= 15). 51 (42%) patients met Chompret criteria, 50 (41%) had a personal history of another cancer, 81 (68%) had first-degree family cancer history.
17/122 (14%) patients had a germline pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant (GPV) : 8/17 (47%) in a homologous recombination (HR) gene (3 BRCA2, 1 BRCA1, 1 BRIP1, 1 ATM, 1 RAD51C, 1 had both BRCA1 and CHEK2), 3/17 (18%) in a mismatch repair (MMR) gene (2 MSH6, 1 MLH1), 3/17 (18%) in TP53 and 3/17 (18%) in another gene (1 RB1, 1 CDKN2A, 1 DICER1). 13/122 (11%) patients had a variant of unknown significance in BRCA2, TP53, CHEK2, MSH6, PALB2, MSH2, POT1, ATM genes. The median age at cancer diagnosis was younger in patients with a GPV than in patients without (30 vs 53 yo, p= 0.025). Chompret criteria and the sarcoma subtype were not predictive of the presence of a GPV.
Conclusions
The profile of cancer predisposition genes seems to differ among adult sarcoma patients. TP53 is not the most frequently mutated gene in our cohort. The prevalence of GPV in HR and MMR genes is more than 3-fold higher than in TP53. Larger studies are needed to redefine the spectrum of GPV involved in adult sarcoma predisposition, especially since these genes may have a theranostic impact.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
22P - Pre-clinical development of CVGBM: A therapeutic mRNA-based multiepitope vaccine for glioblastoma
Presenter: Ronja Mülfarth
Session: Poster session 07
23P - Germline testing in a selected cohort of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients: Final results from the INHERITY LC study
Presenter: Maria Zurera Berjaga
Session: Poster session 07
24P - Assessment of an AI algorithm to classify germline variants in the ATM cancer predisposition gene
Presenter: Nooshin Bayat
Session: Poster session 07
25P - NGS-based identification of novel hereditary breast/ovarian cancer genes in patients with clinical features of genetic predisposition
Presenter: Ekaterina Kuligina
Session: Poster session 07
26P - Multi-feature cell free DNA analysis and ensemble machine learning for early detection of cancer
Presenter: Seongmun Jeong
Session: Poster session 07
27P - Molecular insights on cutaneous melanoma hyperpigmentation and therapy resistance
Presenter: Elena Andreucci
Session: Poster session 07
28P - Targeting YAP1 as a biomarker of resistance and therapeutic strategy in melanoma immunotherapy
Presenter: Szonja Kovács
Session: Poster session 07
29P - Considering intra-patient response variability in clinical trials: Implications for treatment efficacy and survival
Presenter: Caryn Geady
Session: Poster session 07
Resources:
Abstract
30P - CDK4/6 inhibitors dephosphorylate RNF26 to stabilize TSC1 and increase the sensitivity of ccRCC to mTOR inhibitors
Presenter: Yang Zheng
Session: Poster session 07
31P - Napabucasin transforms liver microenvironment and boosts immunotherapy efficacy by converting potential metastases into “hot” tumors
Presenter: Li Lin
Session: Poster session 07