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Different Fumarate Hydratase Gene Variants Are Associated With Distinct Cancer Phenotypes
Author(s) -
Junne Kamihara,
Carolyn Horton,
Yuan Tian,
Jing Zhou,
Marcy E. Richardson,
Holly LaDuca,
Huma Q. Rana
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jco precision oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2473-4284
DOI - 10.1200/po.21.00263
Subject(s) - interquartile range , cohort , kidney cancer , odds ratio , medicine , cancer , oncology
PURPOSE Whether individuals with monoallelic FH pathogenic variants (PVs) associated with autosomal recessive fumarate hydratase (FH) deficiency are also at risk of autosomal dominant FH-associated tumors is of paramount clinical importance.METHODS A retrospective study of individuals with a PV in the FH gene identified via multigene panel testing from 2012 to 2019 through a single testing laboratory was performed. Cancer histories of individuals with PVs in FH ( FH PV) were compared to those with PVs associated only with autosomal recessive FH deficiency (FH-d PV) and to FH-negative controls. Cancer histories of individuals with truncating versus nontruncating FH PV were also compared.RESULTS Individuals with FH PV were more likely to have kidney cancer than those with FH-d PV (odds ratio, 9.0; 95% CI, 4.4 to 20.0; P < .001) or FH-negative controls (odds ratio, 7.6; 95% CI, 5.2 to 11.2; P value < .001). The FH PV cohort had kidney cancer at a significantly younger age (median age: 35.0 years; interquartile range, 26.0-45.0 years) than the FH-d PV cohort (median age: 44.5 years; interquartile range, 43.5-53.5 years; P = .011). Within the FH PV cohort, there were no differences in the frequency or age at kidney cancer between those with truncating versus nontruncating PV.CONCLUSION Unlike FH PV, FH-d PV are not associated with kidney cancers at early ages of onset. The FH-d PV cohort had a cancer phenotype that resembled FH-negative controls. These data may inform genetic counseling and risk assessment of individuals with FH-d PV.

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