Germline Mutations in Predisposition Genes in Pediatric Cancer
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital · James S. McDonnell Foundation
Abstract
The prevalence and spectrum of predisposing mutations among children and adolescents with cancer are largely unknown. Knowledge of such mutations may improve the understanding of tumorigenesis, direct patient care, and enable genetic counseling of patients and families.
In 1120 patients younger than 20 years of age, we sequenced the whole genomes (in 595 patients), whole exomes (in 456), or both (in 69). We analyzed the DNA sequences of 565 genes, including 60 that have been associated with autosomal dominant cancer-predisposition syndromes, for the presence of germline mutations. The pathogenicity of the mutations was determined by a panel of medical experts with the use of cancer-specific and locus-specific genetic databases, the medical literature, computational predictions, and second hits identified in the tumor genome. The same approach was used to analyze data from 966 persons who did not have known cancer in the 1000 Genomes Project, and a similar approach was used to analyze data from an autism study (from 515 persons with autism and 208 persons without autism).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 72.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
32Topics & keywords
- Germline
- Genetics
- Germline mutation
- Gene
- Biology
- Mutation
- Computational biology