domingo, 14 de enero de 2018

Pediatric oncologist willingness to offer germline TP53 testing in osteosarcoma. - PubMed - NCBI

Pediatric oncologist willingness to offer germline TP53 testing in osteosarcoma. - PubMed - NCBI



 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1002/cncr.31212. [Epub ahead of print]

Pediatric oncologist willingness to offer germline TP53 testing in osteosarcoma.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) is a cancer predisposition syndrome caused by mutations in the tumor-suppressor gene TP53. Osteosarcoma is a sentinel cancer in LFS. Prior studies using Sanger sequencing platforms have demonstrated that 3% of individuals with osteosarcoma harbor a mutation in TP53. New data from next-generation sequencing have demonstrated that 3.8% of patients with osteosarcoma have a known pathogenic variant, and an additional 5.7% carry exonic variants of unknown significance in TP53.

METHODS:

Pediatric oncologists were e-mailed an anonymous 18-question survey assessing their willingness to offer TP53 germline testing to a child with osteosarcoma with or without a family history, and they were evaluated for changes in their choices with the prior data and the new data.

RESULTS:

One hundred seventy-seven pediatric oncologists (22%) responded to the survey. Respondents were more likely to offer TP53 testing to a patient with a positive family history (77.4% vs 12.4%; P < .0001). Significantly more providers responded that they would offer TP53 testing once they were provided with the new data (25.4% vs 12.4%; P = .0038). The proportion of providers who responded that they were unsure increased significantly when they were presented with the new data (25.4% vs 10.2%; P = .0002). Potential implications for other family members and the possibility that surveillance imaging would detect new malignancies at an earlier stage were important factors influencing a provider's decision to offer TP53 testing.

CONCLUSIONS:

Recent data increase the proportion of providers willing to offer testing, and this suggests concern on the part of pediatric oncologists that variants of unknown significance may be disease-defining in rare cancers. Cancer 2018. © 2018 American Cancer Society.

KEYWORDS:

Li-Fraumeni syndrome; TP53; osteosarcoma; pediatrics; practice patterns

PMID:
 
29313943
 
DOI:
 
10.1002/cncr.31212

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