EP Slater1, Peter Langer1, Eva Niemczyk2, Konstantin Strauch3, J. Butler2, Nils Habbe1, John P. Neoptolemos2, William Greenhalf2, DK Bartsch1
1German National Case Collection of Familial Pancreatic Cancer (FaPaCa), Department of Surgery, Philipps-University, Marburg, Germany
2EUROPAC-Registry, Department of Surgery, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom
3Institute of Medical Biometry and Epidemiology, Philipps University, Marburg, Germany
Tóm tắt
Slater EP, Langer P, Niemczyk E, Strauch K, Butler J, Habbe N, Neoptolemos JP, Greenhalf W, Bartsch DK. PALB2 mutations in European pancreatic cancer families.Recently, PALB2 was reported to be a new pancreatic cancer susceptibility gene as determined by exomic sequencing, as truncating PALB2 mutations were identified in 3 of 96 American patients with familial pancreatic cancer (FPC). Representing the European Registry of Hereditary Pancreatitis and Familial Pancreatic Cancer (EUROPAC) and the German National Case Collection for Familial Pancreatic Cancer (FaPaCa), we evaluated whether truncating mutations could also be detected in European FPC families. We have directly sequenced the 13 exons of the PALB2 gene in affected index patients of 81 FPC families. An index patient was defined as the first medically identified patient, stimulating investigation of other members of the family to discover a possible genetic factor. None of these patients carried a BRCA2 mutation. We identified three (3.7%) truncating PALB2 mutations, each producing different stop codons: R414X, 508‐9delAG and 3116delA. Interestingly, each of these three families also had a history of breast cancer. Therefore, PALB2 mutations might be causative for FPC in a small subset of European families, especially in those with an additional occurrence of breast cancer.