在南非夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省 Inkosi Albert Luthuli 中心医院就诊的非洲黑人和印度裔乳腺癌患者的遗传趋势和常见 BRCA1/2 致病序列变异。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Samj South African Medical Journal Pub Date : 2024-05-31 DOI:10.7196/SAMJ.2024.v114i6.1094
M Makhetha, C Aldous, N Chabilal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:遗传性乳腺癌的特点是致病序列变异代代相传。这类癌症具有侵袭性,发病较早,占所有乳腺癌病例的 5 - 10%。在南非(SA),白人患者中易患遗传性乳腺癌的常见变异已被充分记录,并成为定向检测中筛查面板的一部分。对于非白人患者,常见的变异基因并不十分清楚,因此,所有人群都要接受针对白人患者优化的相同检测。这就存在误诊的风险,其后果包括复发和死亡率上升:回顾性描述南澳夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省黑非洲人和印度人乳腺癌患者的遗传趋势:我们回顾了 2011 年至 2021 年期间在 Inkosi Albert Luthuli 中心医院就诊的乳腺癌和高危患者的临床和遗传数据。纳入标准基于南澳大利亚临床指南规定的临床和人口特征:非洲黑人患者较为年轻(平均 37.6 岁,标准差 11.16),三阴性肿瘤患者占多数(37.5%)。印第安人占双侧乳腺癌和高危人群的 50%。我们发现了 30 个致病性 BRCA1/2 序列变异、4 个大型基因组重排和 13 个意义不明的变异。其中,20 名黑人患者携带 12 个变体,13 名白人患者携带 4 个变体,25 名印度患者携带 16 个变体,3 名有色人种患者携带 3 个致病序列变体。最常见的变异是黑人患者中的 BRCA2 c.5771_5774del、p.Ile1924fs,白人患者中的 BRCA2 c.7934del、p.Arg2645fs,以及印度患者中的 BRCA2 c.8754+1G>A。黑人、印度人或有色人种患者中均未报告白人患者中常见的创始基因突变,这也解释了为什么黑人、有色人种和印度人 SA 患者在目标筛查中的检测结果始终为阴性:本研究强调了南澳大利亚人群独特的遗传趋势,以及需要针对这些人群进行更全面的定向检测。
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Genetic trends and common BRCA1/2 pathogenic sequence variants in black African and Indian breast cancer patients presenting at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Central Hospital, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

Background: Hereditary breast cancer is characterised by the presence of a pathogenic sequence variant passed from one generation to the next. These cancers are aggressive, develop early, and account for 5 - 10% of all breast cancer cases. In South Africa (SA), the common variants that predispose to hereditary breast cancer have been well documented among white patients and form part of screening panels during targeted testing. For non-white patients, common variants are not well understood, and as such, all populations are offered the same test optimised for white patients. This carries a risk of misdiagnosis, the consequences of which include recurrence and increased mortality.

Objectives: To retrospectively describe genetic trends in the black African and Indian breast cancer patients from KwaZulu-Natal Province, SA.

Methods: We reviewed clinical and genetic data of breast cancer and high-risk patients who consulted at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Central Hospital between 2011 and 2021. Inclusion criteria were based on clinical and demographic characteristics as defined by SA clinical guidelines.

Results: Black African patients were young (mean 37.6 years, standard deviation 11.16) and had the majority of triple-negative tumours (37.5%). Indians represented 50% of bilateral breast cancers and of high-risk individuals. We identified 30 pathogenic BRCA1/2 sequence variants, four large genomic rearrangements and 13 variants of unknown significance. Twenty black patients carried 12, 13 white patients carried 4, 25 Indian patients carried 16, and 3 coloured patients carried 3 pathogenic sequence variants. The most frequent variants were BRCA2 c.5771_5774del, p.Ile1924fs among black patients, BRCA2 c.7934del, p.Arg2645fs among white patients, and BRCA2 c.8754+1G>A among Indian patients. None of the founder mutations common in white patients was reported in either black, Indian or coloured patients, which explains why black, Coloured and Indian SA patients consistently test negative during targeted screening.

Conclusion: This study highlights unique genetic trends for SA populations and the need for more inclusive targeted tests that are optimal for these populations.

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来源期刊
Samj South African Medical Journal
Samj South African Medical Journal 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
4.50%
发文量
175
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The SAMJ is a monthly peer reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal. It carries The SAMJ is a monthly, peer-reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal publishing leading research impacting clinical care in Africa. The Journal is not limited to articles that have ‘general medical content’, but is intending to capture the spectrum of medical and health sciences, grouped by relevance to the country’s burden of disease. This will include research in the social sciences and economics that is relevant to the medical issues around our burden of disease The journal carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other medical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries, general correspondence, and classified advertisements (refer to the section policies for further information).
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