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New Era of Genetic Testing in Colon Cancer Carol Burke, MD, FACG, FASGE, AGAF, FACP Sanford R Weiss Center for Hereditary Colorectal Neoplasia Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio September 19, 2015 Overview • Recognize clues suggestive of a genetic colorectal cancer syndrome • Understand the genetic testing process for hereditary colorectal cancer syndromes Pathways to CRC Sporadic CRC FAP Adenoma MAP CIN-MSS MSI Lynch Syndrome CIMP Sessile Serrated Polyp MSI MLH1 promotor methylation BRAF mutation Chromosomal Instability Pino MS, et al. NEJM 2010;339;1277 CpG Island Methylation (CIMP) Gene Expression Gene Silencing Turns off MLH1 Multi Target Stool DNA Testing vs FIT • Assay: Methylation of BMP3 and NDRG4, KRAS mutations , B-actin and a fecal immunochemical test P < 0.001 P = 0.002 % P < 0.001 Imperiale T, 2014;370:1287 Microsatellite Instability • Repeated nucleotide sequences called “microsatellites” • DNA fidelity maintained by Mismatch Repair Proteins (MMR) MLH1 PMS2 MSH2 MSH6 Boland CR, Gastroenterology 2010;138:2073 Mismatch Repair Protein Function Nucleotide mismatch Normal MMR T T C AC AGCTG TCGAC AGCTG Microsatellite Stable (MSS) Microsatellite Instability (MSI) T T C AC TCTAC Etiology: AGCTG 1. MLH1 promoter methylation 2. Germline MMR mutationLynch Syndrome AGATG Defective MMR 8 Tumor MSI Testing NR21 BAT25 Normal Tissue Tumor Tissue MSI-H: > 2/5 (30%) consensus MSI sequences Mono27 Immunohistochemistry MLH1 MSH2 Multi Society Task Force Universal Testing of CRC for dMMR Giardiello FM , Am J Gastro 2014;109:1159 11 Universal Tumor Testing for LS • 1066 unselected tumors assessed for MSI/MMR • 19.5% had MSI – 11% (21 patients) diagnosed with LS • Phenotype: – 43% diagnosed > 50 years – 22% did not Amsterdam II or revised Bethesda guidelines Germline Testing Results In 21 Proband’s Relatives Relationship Tested Positive Negative First degree 54 25 29 Second degree 22 10 12 > Third degree 41 17 24 Total 117 52 65 Hampel H et al. NEJM 2005;352;18 Typical Genetic Counseling Appointment • Collect personal and family history • Perform risk assessment (including breast cancer risk models) • Educate about genetic syndromes, management options, genetic testing process • Informed consent and coordination of genetic testing • Psychosocial support and counseling Who Should Have Genetic Counseling for Lynch Syndrome? • Abnormal MSI/IHC testing – (Unless MLH1 methylation is proven) • Colon or endometrial cancer < 50 • > 2 Lynch Syndrome cancers in individual • > 2 relatives with LS cancer, 1 < 50 • > 3 relatives with LS cancer at any age Who Should Have Genetic Counseling for other Colon Cancer Syndromes? • > 10 colon adenomas • Peutz-Jeghers Polyp • Juvenile/Inflammatory Polyps • Colon cancer < age 50 • Close relative diagnosed < age 50 or >2 close relatives with colon cancer Hereditary Colon Cancer Syndromes Syndrome Gene(s) Features Lynch MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, EPCAM Colon, endometrial, ovarian, gastric, urinary tract, small bowel cancers, brain tumors, sebaceous neoplasms Li Fraumeni TP53 Childhood cancers, sarcoma, leukemia, brain tumors, breast cancer, colon cancer Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP) APC Adenomas, colon cancer, thyroid cancer, osteomas and soft tissue tumors, desmoid tumors MYH-Associated Polyposis (MAP) MUTYH* Adenomas, colon cancer, thyroid cancer Peutz-Jeghers STK11 Mucocutaneous melanin spots, hamartomas, breast, GI, pancreatic, and rare gyn cancers Cowden PTEN Hamartomas, derm lesions, macrocephaly, breast, thyroid, and endometrial cancers Juvenile Polyposis Syndrome BMPR1A, SMAD4 Hamartomas, colon cancer, some with SMAD4 have HHT Traditional Cancer Risk Assessment and Genetic Testing HNPCC/Lynch syndrome! d. stroke d. uterine ca 80 61 57 59 colon ca 47 27 24 60 d. colon ca 47 62 colon ca 50 35 32 30 Traditional Genetic Testing • Utilizes Sanger sequencing and large rearrangement analysis • Testing often limited to 1-2 syndromes based on assessment of personal/family history • Only testing for high-risk, well known syndrome • Variant of uncertain significance rate is low • Results take 2-3 weeks Next Generation Sequencing • Whole genome, or several genes can be analyzed at once • Allows for testing many genes relatively inexpensively • Used for panel genetic testing – Cancer specific vs – Pan cancer Multi-Gene Panels • Benefits • Limitations – Increased mutation – Not all tests are positive rate – Identification of conditions of low clinical suspicion equal – Various levels of gene coverage – Cost effective – Lower turn-aroundtime then reflex testing – Increased VUS rate – Moderate-risk genes – Longer turn-aroundtime than single gene Insurance Coverage & Cost • Most labs offer insurance pre-authorization • Many labs billing with same CPT codes as BRCA, Lynch testing • Costs range from $1500-$4400 What Are Testing Options? • 10 panels (5-28 genes) • 10 panels (7-29 genes) – Build your own • 7 panels (7-29 genes) – Build your own • 1 panel (25 genes) • 2 panels (20-52 genes) Example from Invitae Myriad Genetics Lab myRisk Gene Panel High Risk Genes Breast Cancer Colon Cancer • BRCA1/BRCA2 (HBOC) • CDH1 (Hereditary Diffuse • APC (Familial Gastric Cancer) • PTEN (Cowden) • STK11 (Peutz-Jeghers) • TP53 (Li-Fraumeni) Adenomatous Polyposis) • BMPR1A/SMAD4 (Juvenile Polyposis) • MLH1/MSH2/MSH6/PMS2/ EPCAM (Lynch Syndrome) • MYH (MYH-Associated Polyposis) High Risk Genes • Significant risk of developing certain types of cancer • Considerable research and professional society guidelines for screening and surgery • Family members can be tested for the same mutation Moderate Risk Genes • ATM (Ataxia Telangiectasia) – Breast, pancreatic, colon • CDKN2A (Familial Atypical Mole Malignant Melanoma) – Pancreatic, melanoma • CHEK2 (Li-Fraumeni Like Syndrome) – Breast, prostate, colon • PALB2 (Fanconi Anemia) – Breast, pancreatic Moderate Risk Genes • 2- to 4-fold risk over the general population risk. • Cancer risk is not as elevated as a mutation in a high risk gene. • Limited research and no professional society screening or surgical recommendations • Family history is often better for risk stratification • Unclear if it is beneficial to test other family members for these mutations Potential Results from myRisk • Positive – High risk gene – Moderate risk gene – New moderate risk gene • Negative • Variant of uncertain significance Incidental Finding Case 2 Caucasian/N. American 90 85 dx female ca 65 AJ Irish no info d. 83 dx br ca 60s n 55 d. young accident 61 test ca 64 45 65 42 dx br ca 42 34 Lynch Syndrome PMS2 NCCN 2.201 Incidental Finding Case 3 Hungary d. 54 Panc ca Sicily 2 81 89 CRC 89 47 50 88 br ca 45 d. 64 55 d.55 b/l br ca 44 BRCA - 26 29 p 61 51 d. 40 Panc ca Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer • CDH1 mutations • 39% breast cancer risk by age 80 • Diffuse gastric cancer – 67% for men and 83% for women by age 80 – Average onset 38 years (range of 14-69 years) – Options for intense screening or prophylactic gastrectomy/mastectomy Variants of Uncertain Significance: Our results • 235 VUS in 171 patients (41.4%) – majority in moderate risk genes (62.2%) • VUS rate lower in those of European ancestry than African, Asian, and Middle Eastern (p=0.001) Important Insurance Updates • Companies requiring pre-test genetic counseling: – CareSource – CCF Employee Health Plan – Cigna – Medical Mutual of Ohio Conclusions • Variety of “Genetic” tests to determine cause of hereditary colon cancer syndromes • Currently, test the tumor first in patients with CRC – Germline testing for polyposis or when tumor not available • Genetic testing in transformation: • NGS lowering costs and driving panel based testing – Not all panel tests are created equal • Caution: panel testing “easy” to order but complicated to interpret • Get a lot of information we might not understand • Find unanticipated mutations that highly impact patient care