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Germline testing Susan Domchek, MD University of Pennsylvania Key issues • Do oncologists underestimate the power of germline genetics? Predictive testing can prevent disease – in our patients and their family members – It is important and valuable in its own right – Germline findings can have therapeutic implications on their own – Many of our patients should have already had germline testing before they developed cancer Germline testing is standard of care • Many diseases in which all patients should be offered germline testing • • • • • • • • Adrenocortical Pheochromocytoma Paraganglioma Ovarian cancer Triple negative breast cancer <60 Diffuse gastric cancer <40 Medullary thyroid cancer Etc etc Hampell Gen Med et al 2015 Case 1: Germline testing can prevent disease BRCA1 C61G This woman would have been aided much more by predictive germline testing and risk reducing salpingo-oophorectomy than somatic sequencing of the tumor she developed Key issues • There are several ways to do tumor testing: do patients and providers understand germline implications of each method? – Paired germline/somatic vs somatic with germline subtracted vs somatic only – Understand strengths and weaknesses – Develop strategies so that data can be used – Appropriate consent Case 2: Does anyone understand what we are doing? Technical aspects of germline sequencing • Rationale for germline sequencing are different and sensitivity for mutations is not necessarily the same – Identification of cancer susceptibility variants vs. comparison to a tumor sequence – Sensitivity of deletion/duplication? Uniform coverage? – Current standard remains to do germline testing if indicated regardless of somatic results Key issues • Reporting: – Differential level of variant review and annotation for germline and somatic – Testing is done for different reasons – and may have different thresholds – Not everything needs to be further evaluated in the germline (VUS/benign in ClinVar) – Clarification of reporting • Founder mutations • Allelic frequency? • Beyond cancer related genes? Case 3: Multiple reporting confusions • Oncologist at Penn had received germline and somatic testing reports and “it is very weird but the patient has different mutations in germline and tumor” – BRCA1 C61G, c.181T>G: They are the same • Patient – very concerned because her uncle has a different germline mutation than she does – does she need to be retested? – BRCA1 187delAG (also known as BRCA1 185delAG and c.68_69delAG) – Common Ashkenazi Jewish founder mutation Case 4: Variants of Uncertain Significance • Not infrequent that findings on somatic reports are “unimportant” in ClinVar – VUS: When found in the germline – we do not act on these, management is based on family history – GENIE and other initiatives – May be particularly important in loss of function – For alternations that on the germline side would be VUS at best – this may “dilute” the study, as we may not expect responses Key issues • Somatic only – the de facto standard in the community at this time – What results should trigger rapid and low barrier referral for germline testing? Why does this matter? – Extending beyond the traditional model - cancer community has create new models Case 5: Why do germline testing once we have somatic results? Somatic sequencing in the mother’s ovarian tumor: BRCA2 6014_6017delATAG Testing in the two daughters is uninformative without knowing if the mutation is germline in the mother Irish/English, no AJ We were able to obtain a sample while proband was on hospice: no germline mutation was detected Best practice list: Somatic sequencing findings with consideration for gemline testing • Tumors with a pathogenic or likely pathogenic BRCA1, BRCA2, MLH1, MSH2, or MSH6 mutations • Pathogenic variants in BRIP1, PALB2, RAD51C, RAD51D • Founder mutations (which will be specified in report) •TP53 R337H; ATM V2424G; •APC I1307K; CHEK2 1100delC, I157T, S428F will have explanatory text (as moderate prevalence founder/common mutations) • Pathogenic variants in genes for which your patient appears to have an associated clinical phenotype (See checklist ) • Patients whose personal or family history is suggestive of a hereditary cancer syndrome should be referred regardless of somatic testing results D Clark, K Maxwell, K Nathanson, S Domchek, J Morrissette Considerations • Embrace the germline: risk prediction and prevention for patients and family members – as well as targeted therapy • Consent, disclosure, and data usage • Clarity of testing and reporting for providers and patients • Novel models for consent and information dissemination Suggestions from the clinical oncologist 1. Encourage use of germline testing early in disease in appropriate candidates 2. Clarify reporting: Type of testing and reporting of results – – – 3. Clearly identify type of testing Clearly identify founder mutations Develop consistent reporting across germline and somatic sequencing Develop a best practice list of which somatic results should be promptly referred to germline testing Recommendations from the germline panel 1. Encourage analysis of the germline 2. Improve annotation and reporting 3. Evolve paradigms for consent and return of results 4. Provide guidance for community oncologist for inferences of germline in somatic testing