A clinical screening tool to detect genetic cancer predisposition in pediatric oncology shows high sensitivity but can miss a substantial percentage of affected children
Research output: Contribution to journal › Research article › Contributed
Contributors
Abstract
PURPOSE: Clinical checklists are the standard of care to determine whether a child with cancer shows indications for genetic testing. Nevertheless, the efficacy of these tests to reliably detect genetic cancer predisposition in children with cancer is still insufficiently investigated.
METHODS: We assessed the validity of clinically recognizable signs to identify cancer predisposition by correlating a state-of-the-art clinical checklist to the corresponding exome sequencing analysis in an unselected single-center cohort of 139 child-parent data sets.
RESULTS: In total, one-third of patients had a clinical indication for genetic testing according to current recommendations, and 10.1% (14 of 139) of children harbored a cancer predisposition. Of these, 71.4% (10 of 14) were identified through the clinical checklist. In addition, >2 clinical findings in the checklist increased the likelihood to identifying genetic predisposition from 12.5% to 50%. Furthermore, our data revealed a high rate of genetic predisposition (40%, 4 of 10) in myelodysplastic syndrome cases, while no (likely) pathogenic variants were identified in the sarcoma and lymphoma group.
CONCLUSION: In summary, our data show high checklist sensitivity, particularly in identifying childhood cancer predisposition syndromes. Nevertheless, the checklist used here also missed 29% of children with a cancer predisposition, highlighting the drawbacks of sole clinical evaluation and underlining the need for routine germline sequencing in pediatric oncology.
Details
Original language | English |
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Article number | 100875 |
Journal | Genetics in Medicine |
Volume | 25 |
Issue number | 8 |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2023 |
Peer-reviewed | No |
External IDs
Scopus | 85162008169 |
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WOS | 001038243700001 |
Mendeley | c19ff682-6f69-39b5-813c-941630aaaac6 |
Keywords
DFG Classification of Subject Areas according to Review Boards
Sustainable Development Goals
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Keywords
- Humans, Child, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Early Detection of Cancer, Neoplasms/diagnosis, Genetic Testing, Genotype, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary/diagnosis, Germ-Line Mutation/genetics, Clinical checklists, Pediatric cancer, Germline cancer predisposition, Trio sequencing, Genetic testing