Rare Germline Variants Are Associated with Rapid Biochemical Recurrence After Radical Prostate Cancer Treatment: A Pan Prostate Cancer Group Study.

TitleRare Germline Variants Are Associated with Rapid Biochemical Recurrence After Radical Prostate Cancer Treatment: A Pan Prostate Cancer Group Study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsBurns D, Anokian E, Saunders EJ, Bristow RG, Fraser M, Reimand J, Schlomm T, Sauter G, Brors B, Korbel J, Weischenfeldt J, Waszak SM, Corcoran NM, Jung C-H, Pope BJ, Hovens CM, Cancel-Tassin G, Cussenot O, Loda M, Sander C, Hayes VM, Sorensen KDalsgaard, Lu Y-J, Hamdy FC, Foster CS, Gnanapragasam V, Butler A, Lynch AG, Massie CE, Woodcock DJ, Cooper CS, Wedge DC, Brewer DS, Kote-Jarai Z, Eeles RA
Corporate AuthorsCR-UK/Prostate Cancer UK, ICGC, The PPCG
JournalEur Urol
Volume82
Issue2
Pagination201-211
Date Published2022 Aug
ISSN1873-7560
KeywordsGerm Cells, Germ-Line Mutation, Humans, Male, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases, Prostatectomy, Prostatic Neoplasms, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt, Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras), TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Germline variants explain more than a third of prostate cancer (PrCa) risk, but very few associations have been identified between heritable factors and clinical progression.

OBJECTIVE: To find rare germline variants that predict time to biochemical recurrence (BCR) after radical treatment in men with PrCa and understand the genetic factors associated with such progression.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Whole-genome sequencing data from blood DNA were analysed for 850 PrCa patients with radical treatment from the Pan Prostate Cancer Group (PPCG) consortium from the UK, Canada, Germany, Australia, and France. Findings were validated using 383 patients from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset.

OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: A total of 15,822 rare (MAF <1%) predicted-deleterious coding germline mutations were identified. Optimal multifactor and univariate Cox regression models were built to predict time to BCR after radical treatment, using germline variants grouped by functionally annotated gene sets. Models were tested for robustness using bootstrap resampling.

RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Optimal Cox regression multifactor models showed that rare predicted-deleterious germline variants in "Hallmark" gene sets were consistently associated with altered time to BCR. Three gene sets had a statistically significant association with risk-elevated outcome when modelling all samples: PI3K/AKT/mTOR, Inflammatory response, and KRAS signalling (up). PI3K/AKT/mTOR and KRAS signalling (up) were also associated among patients with higher-grade cancer, as were Pancreas-beta cells, TNFA signalling via NKFB, and Hypoxia, the latter of which was validated in the independent TCGA dataset.

CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate for the first time that rare deleterious coding germline variants robustly associate with time to BCR after radical treatment, including cohort-independent validation. Our findings suggest that germline testing at diagnosis could aid clinical decisions by stratifying patients for differential clinical management.

PATIENT SUMMARY: Prostate cancer patients with particular genetic mutations have a higher chance of relapsing after initial radical treatment, potentially providing opportunities to identify patients who might need additional treatments earlier.

DOI10.1016/j.eururo.2022.05.007
Alternate JournalEur Urol
PubMed ID35659150
Grant List / / Department of Health / United Kingdom
C5047/A14835 / / Cancer Research UK / United Kingdom
C14303/A17197 / / Cancer Research UK / United Kingdom
C35696/A23187 / / Cancer Research UK / United Kingdom
P50 CA211024 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
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