Oncology

Assessment of Diagnostic Outcomes of RNA Genetic Testing for Hereditary Cancer

Abstract

Importance

Performing DNA genetic testing (DGT) for hereditary cancer genes is now a well-accepted clinical practice; however, the interpretation of DNA variation remains a challenge for laboratories and clinicians. Adding RNA genetic testing (RGT) enhances DGT by clarifying the clinical actionability of hereditary cancer gene variants, thus improving clinicians’ ability to accurately apply strategies for cancer risk reduction and treatment.

Objective

To evaluate whether RGT is associated with improvement in the diagnostic outcome of DGT and in the delivery of personalized cancer risk management for patients with hereditary cancer predisposition.

Design, Setting, and Participants

Diagnostic study in which patients and/or families with inconclusive variants detected by DGT in genes associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, Lynch syndrome, and hereditary diffuse gastric cancer sent blood samples for RGT from March 2016 to April 2018. Clinicians who ordered genetic testing and received a reclassification report for these variants were surveyed to assess whether RGT-related variant reclassifications changed clinical management of these patients. To quantify the potential number of tested individuals who could benefit from RGT, a cohort of 307 812 patients who underwent DGT for hereditary cancer were separately queried to identify variants predicted to affect splicing. Data analysis was conducted from March 2016 and September 2018.

Main Outcomes and Measures

Variant reclassification outcomes following RGT, clinical management changes associated with RGT-related variant reclassifications, and the proportion of patients who would likely be affected by a concurrent DGT and RGT multigene panel testing approach.

Results

In total, 93 if 909 eligible families (10.2%) submitted samples for RGT. Evidence from RGT clarified the interpretation of 49 of 56 inconclusive cases (88%) studied; 26 (47%) were reclassified as clinically actionable and 23 (41%) were clarified as benign. Variant reclassifications based on RGT results changed clinical management recommendations for 8 of 18 patients (44%) and 14 of 18 families (78%), based on responses from 18 of 45 clinicians (40%) surveyed. A total of 7265 of 307 812 patients who underwent DGT had likely pathogenic variants or variants of uncertain significance potentially affecting splicing, indicating that approximately 1 in 43 individuals could benefit from RGT.

Conclusions and Relevance

In this diagnostic study, conducting RNA testing resolved a substantial proportion of variants of uncertain significance in a cohort of individuals previously tested for cancer predisposition by DGT. Performing RGT might change the diagnostic outcome of at least 1 in 43 patients if performed in all individuals undergoing genetic evaluation for hereditary cancer.

  • Authors: Rachid Karam; Blair Conner; Holly LaDuca; Kelly McGoldrick; Kate Krempley; Marcy E. Richardson; Heather Zimmermann; Stephanie Gutierrez; Patrick Reineke; Lily Hoang; Kyle Allen; Amal Yussuf; Suzette Farber-Katz; Huma Q. Rana; Samantha Culver; John Lee; Sarah Nashed; Deborah Toppmeyer; Debra Collins; Ginger Haynes; Tina Pesaran; Jill S. Dolinsky; Brigette Tippin Davis; Aaron Elliott; Elizabeth Chao
  • Collaborators: Cedar Sinai Medical Center; Dana Farber Cancer Institute; Merck Research Laboratories; Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey; University of California, Irvine; University of Kansas Cancer Center
  • Journal: JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
  • Date: 2019 - Oct

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