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abstract:
Multiple rare variants in high-risk pancreatic cancer-related genes may increase risk for pancreatic cancer in a subset of patients with and without germline CDKN2A mutations
The risk of pancreatic cancer (PC) is increased in melanoma-prone families but the causal relationship between germline CDKN2A mutations and PC risk is uncertain, suggesting the existence of non-CDKN2A
factors. One genetic possibility involves patients having mutations in
multiple high-risk PC-related genes; however, no systematic examination
has yet been conducted. We used next-generation sequencing data to
examine 24 putative PC-related genes in 43 PC patients with and 23 PC
patients without germline CDKN2A
mutations and 1001 controls. For each gene and the four pathways in
which they occurred, we tested whether PC patients (overall or CDKN2A+ and CDKN2A−
cases separately) had an increased number of rare nonsynonymous
variants. Overall, we identified 35 missense variants in PC patients, 14
in CDKN2A+ and 21 in CDKN2A− PC cases. We found nominally significant associations for mismatch repair genes (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2) in all PC patients and for ATM, CPA1, and PMS2 in CDKN2A− PC patients. Further, nine CDKN2A+ and four CDKN2A−
PC patients had rare potentially deleterious variants in multiple
PC-related genes. Loss-of-function variants were only observed in CDKN2A− PC patients, with ATM having the most pathogenic variants. Also, ATM variants (n = 5) were only observed in CDKN2A−
PC patients with a family history that included digestive system
tumors. Our results suggest that a subset of PC patients may have
increased risk because of germline mutations in multiple PC-related
genes.
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