Resumen
Background: Germline studies in testicular cancer have focused on unselected populations but so far have not led to recommendations for testicular cancer screening. Objective: Herein, we hypothesized that men with testicular cancer and an additional risk factor for hereditary cancer predisposition carry a higher rate of pathogenic variants than men with testicular cancer without another risk factor. Methods and Results: 187 patients with a personal history of testicular cancer underwent germline testing via Invitae. Patients were divided into low-risk and high-risk patients. Low-risk patients (n=83) had testicular cancer as their only primary malignancy without a family history of testicular cancer. High-risk patients (n=104) had additional primary malignancies and/or a family history of testicular cancer. 23.1% of patients harbored pathogenic germline variants with 19.6% carrying actionable variants. Among low-risk patients, 13.5% carried pathogenic variants versus 29.9% in the high-risk cohort. Of patients with a family history of non-testicular cancers and a personal history of additional primary malignancies, 32% harbored pathogenic variants. Conclusion: High-risk patients are twice as likely to harbor pathogenic variants compared to low-risk patients. Importantly, patients with a family history of cancer and other primary malignancies represent a subset of patients that may benefit from genetic evaluation.
Idioma original | English (US) |
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Páginas (desde-hasta) | 113.e9-113.e15 |
Publicación | Urologic Oncology: Seminars and Original Investigations |
Volumen | 40 |
N.º | 3 |
DOI | |
Estado | Published - mar 2022 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Urology
- Oncology