Diagnosis of Li-Fraumeni Syndrome

  • Konstantin Weber-Lassalle
  • Philipp Harter
  • Jan Hauke
  • Corinna Ernst
  • Stefan Kommoss
  • Frederik Marmé
  • Nana Weber-Lassalle
  • Katharina Prieske
  • Dimo Dietrich
  • Julika Borde
  • Esther Pohl-Rescigno
  • Alexander Reuss
  • Beyhan Ataseven
  • Christoph Engel
  • Julia C Stingl
  • Rita K Schmutzler
  • Eric Hahnen

Related Research units

Abstract

The Li-Fraumeni cancer predisposition syndrome (LFS1) presents with a variety of tumor types and the TP53 gene is covered by most diagnostic cancer gene panels. We demonstrate that deleterious TP53 variants identified in blood-derived DNA of 523 patients with ovarian cancer (AGO-TR1 trial) were not causal for the patients' ovarian cancer in three out of six TP53-positive cases. In three out of six patients, deleterious TP53 mutations were identified with low variant fractions in blood-derived DNA but not in the tumor of the patient seeking advice. The analysis of the TP53 and PPM1D genes, both intimately involved in chemotherapy-induced and/or age-related clonal hematopoiesis (CH), in 523 patients and 1,053 age-matched female control individuals revealed that CH represents a frequent event following chemotherapy, affecting 26 of the 523 patients enrolled (5.0%). Considering that TP53 mutations may arise from chemotherapy-induced CH, our findings help to avoid false-positive genetic diagnoses of LFS1.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1059-7794
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12.2018
PubMed 30216591