4.6 Article

Predictors of germline status for hereditary melanoma: 5 years of multi-gene panel testing within the Italian Melanoma Intergroup

Journal

ESMO OPEN
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.esmoop.2022.100525

Keywords

melanoma; germline; predictors; gene panel; CDKN2A; susceptibility

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Melanoma Intergroup (IMI) - IMI/Emme Rouge grants
  2. Italian Ministry of Health [RF-2016-02362288]
  3. Ricerca Corrente/5x1000
  4. Lega Italiana per la Lotta contro I Tumori (LILT) 2019
  5. Fondazione AIRC 'Programma di ricerca 5 per Mille 2018' [21073]
  6. IOV-IRCCS (5x1000) [BIGID219MENI]

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The incidence of cutaneous melanoma is increasing in Italy, indicating a need for revision of genetic assessment criteria. A study on Italian high-risk melanoma cases found that age, number of melanomas, pancreatic cancer, and region of origin are predictors of susceptibility variants.
Background: The incidence of cutaneous melanoma is increasing in Italy, in parallel with the implementation of gene panels. Therefore, a revision of national genetic assessment criteria for hereditary melanoma may be needed. The aim of this study was to identify predictors of susceptibility variants in the largest prospective cohort of Italian high-risk melanoma cases studied to date. Materials and methods: From 25 Italian centers, we recruited 1044 family members and germline sequenced 940 cutaneous melanoma index cases through a shared gene panel, which included the following genes: CDKN2A, CDK4, BAP1, POT1, ACD, TERF2IP, MITF and ATM. We assessed detection rate according to familial status, region of origin, number of melanomas and presence and type of non-melanoma tumors. Results: The overall detection rate was 9.47% (5.53% analyzing CDKN2A alone), ranging from 5.14% in sporadic multiple melanoma cases (spoMPM) with two cutaneous melanomas to 13.9% in familial cases with at least three affected members. Three or more cutaneous melanomas in spoMPM cases, pancreatic cancer and region of origin predicted germline status [odds ratio (OR) = 3.23, 3.15, 2.43, P < 0.05]. Conversely, age > 60 years was a negative independent predictor (OR = 0.13, P = 0.008), and was the age category with the lowest detection rate, especially for CDKN2A. Detection rate was 19% when cutaneous melanoma and pancreatic cancer clustered together. Conclusions: Gene panel doubled the detection rate given by CDKN2A alone. National genetic testing criteria may need a revision, especially regarding age cut-off (60) in the absence of strong family history, pancreatic cancer and/or a high number of cutaneous melanomas.

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