Detalhes do Documento

Combined germline and tumor mutation signature testing identifies new families with NTHL1 tumor syndrome

Autor(es): Pinto, Carla ; Guerra, Joana ; Pinheiro, Manuela ; Escudeiro, Carla ; Santos, Catarina ; Pinto, Pedro ; Porto, Miguel ; Bartosch, Carla ; Silva, João ; Peixoto, Ana ; Teixeira, Manuel R.

Data: 2023

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.22/25740

Origem: Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico do Porto

Assunto(s): NTHL1; Polyposis; Colorectal cancer; Multi-tumor syndrome; Recessive disorder


Descrição

NTHL1 tumor syndrome is an autosomal recessive rare disease caused by biallelic inactivating variants in the NTHL1 gene and which presents a broad tumor spectrum. To contribute to the characterization of the phenotype of this syndrome, we studied 467 index patients by KASP assay or next-generation sequencing, including 228 patients with colorectal polyposis and 239 patients with familial/personal history of multiple tumors (excluding multiple breast/ovarian/polyposis). Three NTHL1 tumor syndrome families were identified in the group of patients with polyposis and none in patients with familial/personal history of multiple tumors. Altogether, we identified nine affected patients with polyposis (two of them diagnosed after initiating colorectal cancer surveillance) with biallelic pathogenic or likely pathogenic NTHL1 variants, as well as two index patients with one pathogenic or likely pathogenic NTHL1 variant in concomitance with a missense variant of uncertain significance. Here we identified a novel inframe deletion classified as likely pathogenic using the ACMG criteria, supported also by tumor mutational signature analysis. Our findings indicate that the NTHL1 tumor syndrome is a multi-tumor syndrome strongly associated with polyposis and not with multiple tumors without polyposis.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) REPOSITÓRIO P.PORTO
Licença CC
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Documentos Relacionados

Não existem documentos relacionados.