4.7 Article

Germline GPR161 Mutations Predispose to Pediatric Medulloblastoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 43-+

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
DOI: 10.1200/JCO.19.00577

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [EG110/15-1, 948/32-1 FUGG]
  2. PedBrain Tumor Project [109252]
  3. German Cancer Aid [109252, 111234]
  4. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [01KU1201A, 01KU1201C]
  5. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research BioTop Grants [01EK1502A, 01EK1502B]
  6. International Cancer Genome Consortium Data Mining [01KU1505F]
  7. German Childhood Cancer Foundation (Deutsche Kinderkrebsstiftung) [A2013/46 DKS2014.12]
  8. Swiss National Science Foundation early postdoctoral mobility fellowship [P2ELP3_155365]
  9. European Molecular Biology Organization Long-Term Fellowship [ALTF 755-2014]

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PURPOSEThe identification of a heritable tumor predisposition often leads to changes in management and increased surveillance of individuals who are at risk; however, for many rare entities, our knowledge of heritable predisposition is incomplete.METHODSFamilies with childhood medulloblastoma, one of the most prevalent childhood malignant brain tumors, were investigated to identify predisposing germline mutations. Initial findings were extended to genomes and epigenomes of 1,044 medulloblastoma cases from international multicenter cohorts, including retrospective and prospective clinical studies and patient series.RESULTSWe identified heterozygous germline mutations in the G protein-coupled receptor 161 (GPR161) gene in six patients with infant-onset medulloblastoma (median age, 1.5 years). GPR161 mutations were exclusively associated with the sonic hedgehog medulloblastoma (MBSHH) subgroup and accounted for 5% of infant MBSHH cases in our cohorts. Molecular tumor profiling revealed a loss of heterozygosity at GPR161 in all affected MBSHH tumors, atypical somatic copy number landscapes, and no additional somatic driver events. Analysis of 226 MBSHH tumors revealed somatic copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity of chromosome 1q as the hallmark characteristic of GPR161 deficiency and the primary mechanism for biallelic inactivation of GPR161 in affected MBSHH tumors.CONCLUSIONHere, we describe a novel brain tumor predisposition syndrome that is caused by germline GPR161 mutations and characterized by MBSHH in infants. Additional studies are needed to identify a potential broader tumor spectrum associated with germline GPR161 mutations.

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