TY - JOUR
T1 - PTEN mutation spectrum and genotype-phenotype correlations in Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome suggest a single entity with Cowden syndrome
AU - Marsh, Debbie J.
AU - Kum, Jennifer B.
AU - Lunetta, Kathryn L.
AU - Bennett, Michael J.
AU - Gorlin, Robert J.
AU - Ahmed, S. Faisal
AU - Bodurtha, Joann
AU - Crowe, Carol
AU - Curtis, Mary A.
AU - Dasouki, Majed
AU - Dunn, Teresa
AU - Feit, Howard
AU - Geraghty, Michael T.
AU - Graham, John M.
AU - Hodgson, Shirley V.
AU - Hunter, Alasdair
AU - Korf, Bruce R.
AU - Manchester, David
AU - Miesfeldt, Susan
AU - Murday, Victoria A.
AU - Nathanson, Katherine L.
AU - Parisi, Melissa
AU - Pober, Barbara
AU - Romano, Corrado
AU - Tolmie, John L.
AU - Trembath, Richard
AU - Winter, Robin M.
AU - Zackai, Elaine H.
AU - Zori, Roberto T.
AU - Weng, Liang Ping
AU - Dahia, Patricia L.M.
AU - Eng, Charis
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to the patients, their families, clinicians and genetics counsellors, especially Dr L. Hudgins, Dr C.E. Jackson, B. Poling, A. Chittenden, H. Hampel, S. Jones, N. Petru-celli and K. Schneider for their invaluable assistance. We thank A. Satterfield for assistance with sample collection and data management, and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Molecular Biology Core Facility, Boston, MA, for running sequencing and Genescan gels. This study was partially supported by National Cancer Institute grant P30 CA16058 (Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center), American Cancer Society grants RPG-97-064-01 and RPG-98-211-01-CCE, US Army Research Medical and Material Command Breast Cancer Research Program grant DAMD17-98-1-8058 and the Concert for the Cure (to C.E.). P.L.M.D. is a postdoctoral fellow of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Research Foundation.
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - Germline mutations in the tumour suppressor gene PTEN have been implicated in two hamartoma syndromes that exhibit some clinical overlap, Cowden syndrome (CS) and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome (BRR). PTEN maps to 10q23 and encodes a dual specificity phosphatase, a substrate of which is phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate, a phospholipid in the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway. CS is characterized by multiple hamartomas and an increased risk of benign and malignant disease of the breast, thyroid and central nervous system, whilst the presence of cancer has not been formally documented in BRR. The partial clinical overlap in these two syndromes is exemplified by the hallmark features of BRR: macrocephaly and multiple lipomas, the latter of which occur in a minority of individuals with CS. Additional features observed in BRR, which may also occur in a minority of CS patients, include Hashimoto's thyroiditis, vascular malformations and mental retardation. Pigmented macules of the glans penis, delayed motor development and neonatal or infant onset are noted only in BRR. In this study, constitutive DNA samples from 43 BRR individuals comprising 16 sporadic and 27 familial cases, 11 of which were families with both CS and BRR, were screened for PTEN mutations. Mutations were identified in 26 of 43 (60%) BRR cases. Genotype-phenotype analyses within the BRR group suggested a number of correlations, including the association of PTEN mutation and cancer or breast fibroadenoma in any given CS, BRR or BRR/CS overlap family (P = 0.014), and, in particular, truncating mutations were associated with the presence of cancer and breast fibroadenoma in a given family (P = 0.024). Additionally, the presence of lipomas was correlated with the presence of PTEN mutation in BRR patients (P = 0.028). In contrast to a prior report, no significant difference in mutation status was found in familial versus sporadic cases of BRR (P = 0.113). Comparisons between BRR and a previously studied group of 37 CS families suggested an increased likelihood of identifying a germline PTEN mutation in families with either CS alone or both CS and BRR when compared with BRR alone (P = 0.002). Among CS, BRR and BRR/CS overlap families that are PTEN mutation positive, the mutation spectra appear similar. Thus, PTEN mutation-positive CS and BRR may be different presentations of a single syndrome and, hence, both should receive equal attention with respect to cancer surveillance.
AB - Germline mutations in the tumour suppressor gene PTEN have been implicated in two hamartoma syndromes that exhibit some clinical overlap, Cowden syndrome (CS) and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome (BRR). PTEN maps to 10q23 and encodes a dual specificity phosphatase, a substrate of which is phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate, a phospholipid in the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway. CS is characterized by multiple hamartomas and an increased risk of benign and malignant disease of the breast, thyroid and central nervous system, whilst the presence of cancer has not been formally documented in BRR. The partial clinical overlap in these two syndromes is exemplified by the hallmark features of BRR: macrocephaly and multiple lipomas, the latter of which occur in a minority of individuals with CS. Additional features observed in BRR, which may also occur in a minority of CS patients, include Hashimoto's thyroiditis, vascular malformations and mental retardation. Pigmented macules of the glans penis, delayed motor development and neonatal or infant onset are noted only in BRR. In this study, constitutive DNA samples from 43 BRR individuals comprising 16 sporadic and 27 familial cases, 11 of which were families with both CS and BRR, were screened for PTEN mutations. Mutations were identified in 26 of 43 (60%) BRR cases. Genotype-phenotype analyses within the BRR group suggested a number of correlations, including the association of PTEN mutation and cancer or breast fibroadenoma in any given CS, BRR or BRR/CS overlap family (P = 0.014), and, in particular, truncating mutations were associated with the presence of cancer and breast fibroadenoma in a given family (P = 0.024). Additionally, the presence of lipomas was correlated with the presence of PTEN mutation in BRR patients (P = 0.028). In contrast to a prior report, no significant difference in mutation status was found in familial versus sporadic cases of BRR (P = 0.113). Comparisons between BRR and a previously studied group of 37 CS families suggested an increased likelihood of identifying a germline PTEN mutation in families with either CS alone or both CS and BRR when compared with BRR alone (P = 0.002). Among CS, BRR and BRR/CS overlap families that are PTEN mutation positive, the mutation spectra appear similar. Thus, PTEN mutation-positive CS and BRR may be different presentations of a single syndrome and, hence, both should receive equal attention with respect to cancer surveillance.
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U2 - 10.1093/hmg/8.8.1461
DO - 10.1093/hmg/8.8.1461
M3 - Article
C2 - 10400993
AN - SCOPUS:0032853452
SN - 0964-6906
VL - 8
SP - 1461
EP - 1472
JO - Human molecular genetics
JF - Human molecular genetics
IS - 8
ER -