Publication | Closed Access
Di‐genic inheritance of germline <i>POLE</i> and <i>PMS2</i> pathogenic variants causes a unique condition associated with pediatric cancer predisposition
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Citations
15
References
2021
Year
GeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyImmunologyPathologyMolecular GeneticsGermline GeneticsDisease Gene IdentificationTumor BiologyPole+mmr Mutational SignaturesUnique ConditionPublic HealthMolecular DiagnosticsMonogenic DisordersDi‐genic InheritancePolymerase Proofreading-associated PolyposisPediatric Cancer PredispositionCancer GeneticsMutated PoleSomatic VariantGenetic DisorderPathogenesisMedicine
Polymerase proofreading-associated polyposis (PPAP) and Lynch syndrome, caused by mutated POLE and mismatch repair (MMR) genes, respectively, are associated with adult-onset cancer. PPAP and MMR-deficient tumors are both hypermutated, and each has a unique mutational signature. We describe a 4.5-year-old boy with multiple café au lait spots who presented with metastatic Sonic Hedgehog-activated medulloblastoma, with partial response to intensive chemotherapy and immunotherapy. The tumor showed microsatellite stability, loss of PMS2 nuclear expression, and an exceptionally high tumor mutational burden of 276 Mut/Mb. Germline molecular analysis revealed an inherited heterozygous pathogenic POLE variant and a de novo heterozygous PMS2 pathogenic variant. The tumor featured the MMR, POLE, and POLE+MMR mutational signatures. This is the first description of a di-genic condition, which we named "POL-LYNCH syndrome," manifested by an aggressive ultra-mutant pediatric medulloblastoma with a unique genomic signature.
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