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Genetic Testing for Hereditary Cancer: Identifying Strategies for Prevention and Treatment Julie Culver, MS, LCGC, CCRP Genetic Counselor Cancer Genetics Program USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Southern California Disclosures • No conflicts of interest Most Cancer is Not Hereditary Hereditary pattern of breast and ovarian cancer 80 99 Br 81 Br-45 71 Br-47 Pr- 50 Br-50 41 45 47 Ov-38 Br-30 4 BRCA1 and BRCA2 Lifetime Cancer Risk Breast cancer 50%-85% Second breast cancer 40%-60% Ovarian cancer 15%-45% Male breast cancer 2-8% Prostate cancer 13-20% Pancreatic cancer risk 13-20%, most notable in BRCA2 ASCO 5 Prevalence of BRCA mutations • 1/400-500 individuals carries a BRCA mutation, unselected for history • Majority of mutations are unique however recurrent mutations occur in specific ethnic populations • Most notable example is that of the Ashkenazi Jewish population • Three founder mutations • Prevalence of 1/40 or 2.5% BRCA1 and 2 Founder Mutations in the Ashkenazi Jewish Population 1 in 40 Ashkenazi Jewish individuals carries a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation BRCA1 187delAG 5382insC BRCA2 6174delT These mutations are estimated to account for 95% of BRCA mutations in this population Cancer Prevention • • • Screening Medications Risk Reducing Surgery BRCA1 and BRCA2 screening and prevention recommendations (NCCN, 2015) Increased breast surveillance BSE training and education, begin at age 18 CBE, every 6-12 months, begin at age 25 Annual mammography and MRI, begin at age 25* Consider risk-reducing mastectomy >90% risk reduction Consider chemoprevention (tamoxifen or Evista) 50-60% risk reduction Risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy at age 35-40 and upon completion of child bearing ~96 % ovarian cancer risk reduction >50 % breast cancer risk reduction Ovarian screening, begin at 30, despite lack of evidence Semiannual transvaginal ultrasound Concurrent CA-125 Family-specific screening Pancreatic cancer screening (MRCP alternating with EUS, with one test done annually) Melanoma screening (dermatology) *Individualized based on earliest age at diagnosis in the family The Angelina Effect • Actress Angelina Jolie revealed in an op-ed article to The New York Times, My Medical Choice, published on May 14, 2013, her choice to undergo a prophylactic bilateral mastectomy at age 37. • Jolie’s mother died at age 56 from cancer, and she herself tested positive for a mutation in BRCA1, which left her with a high risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer. • Note, on March 24, 2015, she announced her choice to undergo a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy for ovarian cancer risk reduction at age 39. • The following report illustrates the impact on NCI PDQ Cancer Genetics digital resources after the high-profile actress brought public attention to breast cancer and genetic risk. PDQ® Cancer Genetics Summaries Of the PDQ® Cancer Genetics summaries, the Genetics of Breast and Ovarian Cancer summary received the largest increase in traffic, with a more than 6-fold increase in page views on May 14 compared to the previous Tuesday. Source: Omniture Molecular Origins of Cancer Inherited Susceptibility to Common Cancers William D. Foulkes, N Engl J Med 2008;359:2143-53. 13 BRCA2 family • Human genetic variation dec issue Panel Testing • Next-generation sequencing technology has reduced the cost of genetic testing • Many genes conferring cancer risk have been discovered and have become clinically relevant • Hereditary cancer panels offering simultaneous testing for dozens of genes since 2012-2013 • The implications for clinical care are still under investigation USC Pilot study of Panels Among 189 breast cancer patients , 12 (6%) had mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2; 15 (8%) had mutation in BARD1, CDH1, CHEK2, MUTYH, PALB2, RAD50, RAD51D, or TP53 JO Culver, CN Ricker, K Lowstuter, DY Sturgeon, CR Chanock, WJ Gauderman, K McDonnell, GE Idos, SB Gruber. Multiplex panel testing improves the yield of mutation detection in cancer genetics clinics. 2014. Presented at the 2014 American Society of Human Genetics annual education conference. PALB2 family BRCA mutations and treatment options • Platinum based chemotherapy known to be more • • • • effective in BRCA+ breast and ovarian cancers Group of pharmacological inhibitors of the enzyme poly ADP ribose (PARP) PARP 1 helps to repair single strand breaks in DNA BRCA2, BRCA2 and PALB2 are involved in repair of double-strand DNA breaks Clinical Trails underway 19 PARP inhibitor for BRCA+ breast cancer Hereditary colon cancer Heterogeneity in Lynch syndrome The Mismatch Repair Genes MSH6 MSH2 MLH1 PMS2 EPCAM Chr 7 Chr 2 Chr 3 • ~ 80-90% caused by mutations in MSH2 and MLH1 • 7-10% caused by mutations in MSH6 • < 5% caused by mutations in PMS2 Mismatch repair Lynch syndrome • • • • • • • Most common form of hereditary colon cancer Uterine cancer second most common cancer Polyps can be present – tend to be flat adenomas History (family and personal) along with tumor analysis by MSI/IHC can help identify families Colonoscopic surveillance can improve survival in at-risk individuals (recommended annual screening starting age 20) Benefits of surveillance for most extracolonic cancers are still unknown Noncarriers can be spared anxiety and the need for increased surveillance General Population 5-10 years Lynch Syndrome 1-3 years Cancer Risk in Individuals with Lynch syndrome to Age 70 Compared to General Population Cancer General Population Risk Lynch syndrome Risk Lynch Mean Age of Onset Colon 7% 80% 45 years Endometrium 2.7% 20-60% 46 years Stomach <1% 11-19% 56 years Ovary 1.5% 9-12% 42.5 years Hepatobiliary tract <1% 2-7% 54 years Urinary tract <1% 4-5% ~55 years Small Bowel <1% 1-4% 49 years Brain / CNS <1% 1-3% 50 years from: http://www.genetests.org Tumor analysis - MSI Microsatellite Instability (MSI) • Microsatellites are repeating sequences found in genes • Instability occur when these repeats are different lengths compared to normal tissue • Seen in 90-95% of HNPCC colorectal tumors • Seen in 15-20% of sporadic colorectal cancers • Requires access to paraffin-embedded colorectal tumors • Most informative in colon cancer, but can be performed in other Lynch related tumors, specifically uterine and to a lesser degree gastric and ovarian • Can be performed in polyps, most informative in adenomas with high-grade dysplasia Normal Microsatellite instability Tumor analysis - IHC Red flags for colon or endometrial cancer patients • • • • Diagnosis before 50 Abnormal MSI or IHC Two or more Lynch cancers at any age Lynch syndrome cancer with a relative with a Lynch syndrome cancer Colorectal cancer treatment decisions • 15% of all colon cancers are MSI high. • MSI high colon cancer shows better prognosis than microsatelite stable (MSS). • MSI high colon cancers do not seem to benefit from adjuvant fluorouracil (FU) -based chemotherapy. • In stage 2 colon cancer, testing of MSI is commonplace for chemotherapy decisions Ribic et al, NEJM, 2003 ; Sargent et al, JCO, 2010 Colorectal cancer treatment decisions Testing an Affected Colon CA dx. 46 Colon CA dx. 42 Colon CA dx. 45 This man wants to be tested, but ideally, his father should be first Testing affected person first allows for accurate interpretation of test results on relatives Negative result on an unaffected person can never be a true negative Consider DNA banking if affected individual has terminal cancer Informative Testing Strategy Family history of cancer? Who is the best person to do genetic testing? New yellow apple Red apple tree growing red apples Red apple tree growing one yellow apple Genetic Counseling – Pre-testing Assess • Personal and family medical history • Risk perception and motivation for testing Educate • Cancer genetics and risk • Risks, benefits, limitations to genetic testing • Management options Informed Consent • Possible results, including positive, negative, uncertain variants Genetics Counseling – Post-testing Results disclosure • Interpretation of results, including positive tests and uncertain variants • Genetic testing recommendations for family Risk assessment • Risk calculation • Screening recommendations • Family member screening recommendations Psychosocial Issues in Testing Common emotions: • Anxiety • Guilt • Grief, and or anticipatory loss • Altered self-esteem • Changes in family dynamics Genetic counseling can help patients work through these emotions Incidental findings of cancer gene mutations in exome testing • • • Several hereditary cancer genes are included in ACMG guidelines for reporting incidental findings (BRCA1, BRCA2, TP53, STK11, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, APC, MUTYH, VHL, MEN1, RET, PTEN, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, SDHAF2, TSC1, TSC2, WT1, NF2) (Green RC et al, Genet in Med, 2013) Clinseq study reported on whole exome sequencing (WES) on 572 healthy adults; seven participants had a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation (four were of Ashkenazi Jewish; one met family history criteria; two were neither Jewish nor met family history criteria); one had a deleterious SDHC mutation, which causes paragangliomas. (Johnston JJ et al, Am J Hum Genet 2012) DICER3 study at Baylor performed WES in 110 pediatric cancer cases and found 10 patients with dominant pathogenic mutations, including 4 that were suggested at study entry (TP53, MSH2, DICER1, VHL), 6 that were not (BRCA1x2, BRCA2, CHEK2, APC, mosaic WT1) (Plon SE et al, 2014 ASHG meeting) Precision Medicine in Cancer Treatment • Discovering unique therapies that treat an individual’s cancer based on the specific abnormalities of that person’s tumor • Identify the mutation that is the driver of cancer growth • Match mutations to known drugs or trials that can offer better response • Examples include HER2+ breast cancer, use of KRAS mutation to determine treatment for colon cancer Pancreas Cancer Case: 66 year old man with pancreatic cancer, metastatic to liver. Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry Pancreas case, continued • Somatic tumor analysis identified BRCA2 S1982fs*22 (known as BRCA2 6174delT) • Germline BRCA1 and BRCA2 testing identified the same BRCA2 mutation • Patient referred to UCLA for PARP trial • Brother recommended to undergo genetic testing Ovarian Cancer Case: 65 year old woman with ovarian cancer, metastatic to liver. Ovary case, continued • Somatic tumor analysis identified BRCA2 mutation, BRCA2 Q2157fs • Germline BRCA1 and BRCA2 testing identified that she did not have a germline mutation • However, potential benefit from somatic mutation was identified Conclusions • Cancer genetic testing offers the promise of improved prevention and lower cancer risk • Genetics is not destiny • Genetic testing is changing rapidly with the availability of multi-gene panels and whole genome testing • Treatment for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers and Lynch syndrome mutation carriers may be altered due to genetic status. • Precision medicine can offer treatment options and may also reveal germline mutation carriers.