Abstract 39P
Background
For breast cancer susceptibility, copy number variants (CNVs) represent a class of genetic variation that has been poorly studied and could therefore explain a part of the unknown hereditary risk. CNVs are generally defined as gains or losses of genomic segments with a size of > 1 kilobase. To evaluate the role of rare CNVs in breast cancer susceptibility, here we have performed a whole-exome sequencing based CNV analysis for Northern Finnish high-risk breast cancer cases and verified obtained results with optical genome mapping.
Methods
Optical genome mapping and exome sequencing were performed for 110 high-risk breast cancer cases. All detected rare recurrent candidate CNVs were characterized at nucleotide level with long-read sequencing and genotyped in geographically matched case-control cohorts (altogether 278 hereditary and 1983 unselected breast cancer cases, and 1229 controls).
Results
Three recurrent alterations were detected: a 31 kb deletion co-occurring with a 3 kb retrotransposon insertion in RAD52, a partial 64 kb duplication in RAD51C and a 13 kb deletion in HSD17B14. Of these, RAD52 and RAD51C are involved in DNA damage response pathway, whereas HSD17B14 encodes a protein involved in steroid hormone metabolism in human tissues, including mammary fat. The CNVs that disrupted RAD52and HSD17B14 genes showed around three-fold enrichment (carrier frequencies 2.5% and 2.9%, respectively) among cases with a family history of the disease and/or early disease onset compared to controls (0.9%), suggesting a role for these alterations in breast cancer susceptibility. The RAD51C duplication had two-fold frequency in breast cancer cases compared to controls. Interestingly, we also identified several double-mutants suggesting the potential role of combined effect of moderate-risk alleles in inherited breast cancer risk.
Conclusions
The identification of recurrent CNVs in these genes, and especially the relatively high frequency of RAD52 and HSD17B14 alterations in the Finnish population, highlights the importance of studying CNVs alongside single nucleotide variants when searching for genetic factors underlying hereditary disease predisposition.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
T.A. Kumpula.
Funding
Academy of Finland, the Cancer Foundation of Finland and Sigrid Juselius Foundation.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
84P - Advancing precision oncology: Integrating immune landscape and genomics for tailored therapy in metastatic cancer patients
Presenter: Eurydice Angeli
Session: Poster session 07
85P - True single-circulating tumor cell genomics reveals enriched therapy-resistance signatures in advanced colorectal cancer patients
Presenter: Manoj Dongare
Session: Poster session 07
Resources:
Abstract
86P - Making the precision oncology landscape of Europe and the Republic of Ireland programmatically accessible
Presenter: Brendan Reardon
Session: Poster session 07
87P - Application of tissue and liquid-based next generation sequencing (NGS) for comprehensive genomic profiling: Evaluating the clinical value of ctDNA technology in treatment decision making
Presenter: Fatima Usman
Session: Poster session 07
88P - Next-generation sequencing (NGS) in routine care: Medical practice in 24 countries from the pan-cancer WAYFIND-R registry
Presenter: Christophe Le Tourneau
Session: Poster session 07
89P - Comprehensive genomic profiling of circulating tumor DNA for treatment recommendation: A sub-project of the IMPRESS-Norway trial
Presenter: Ingrid Dyvik
Session: Poster session 07
90P - Clonal haematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) might mislead interpretation of ATM and CHEK2 alterations detected on liquid biopsies
Presenter: Pasquale Rescigno
Session: Poster session 07
91P - Ultra-sensitive ctDNA NGS assay enhances genomic profiling for advanced HR-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer on endocrine therapy
Presenter: Hao Liao
Session: Poster session 07
92P - Transformative diagnostics in urothelial carcinoma: Utilizing targeted NGS and LP-WGS for non-invasive detection and personalized medicine
Presenter: Huan Zhao
Session: Poster session 07
93P - UriMee: A novel non-invasive test for diagnosis of urothelial carcinoma by detection of methylation markers in urinary sediment DNA
Presenter: Ming cao
Session: Poster session 07