NIH: A new study shows that inherited variations in a known tumor
suppressor gene among children and adolescents with osteosarcoma, a
cancer of the bone, are more common than previously thought. Older
patients who are also susceptible to this malignancy were not found to
carry mutations in the gene, known as TP53. The study, finding that the
genetic susceptibility to young onset osteosarcoma is distinct from
older adult onset osteosarcoma, was published online April 20, 2015, in
the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Lisa Mirabello, Ph.D., of
the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI) Division of Cancer Epidemiology
and Genetics, led the research. NCI is part of the National Institutes
of Health.
The incidence of osteosarcoma peaks between the ages of 10 and 19.
This cancer often arises in people with Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS), a
cancer predisposition syndrome that is most often caused by germline or
inherited mutations in the TP53 gene. LFS results in a constellation of
tumors, often occurring at very young ages. Osteosarcoma can also occur
in families that are not known to have LFS. The role of inherited TP53
mutations in osteosarcoma patients not known to have LFS is not very
well understood.
To try to gain a better understanding of the contribution of TP53
mutations in osteosarcoma, study researchers sequenced the TP53 gene in a
random set of 765 osteosarcoma patients, the largest population
evaluated for these mutations to date. For all patients, DNA was
taken for sequencing from cells found in the blood or in tissue in the
mouth. DNA from tumors was not available.
“We found a higher than expected prevalence of TP53 mutations in
young patients. In particular, we observed mutations known to be
associated with Li-Fraumeni syndrome as well as rare and potentially
highly damaging novel genetic changes,” said Dr. Mirabello. “Some of
these changes were associated with risk of metastasis at diagnosis, as
well as lower survival independent of the presence of metastatic
disease.”
Among the young (less than age 30) osteosarcoma patients in the
study, 3.8 percent carried an LFS-associated mutation in the TP53 gene
and 5.7 percent carried a rare TP53 variation of the gene, for a total
prevalence of TP53 mutations of 9.5 percent, significantly higher than
the previously reported prevalence of about 3 percent. None of the older
osteosarcoma patients carried an LFS-associated mutation.
Because the osteosarcoma patients were identified based on prior
studies, the researchers did not have information on family history of
cancer. The finding that nearly 4 percent of pediatric osteosarcoma
cases have a LFS-associated germline TP53 mutation is important because
these individuals, and possibly their family members, may be at risk of
developing other LFS-associated cancers.
"The findings highlight the potential importance of sequencing the
germline DNA in patients with pediatric osteosarcoma, because the
germline analysis might uncover new cases of Li-Fraumeni syndrome,” said
Doug Lowy, M.D., acting director, NCI.
Testing for germline TP53 mutations is also important because
individuals with LFS have a substantial risk for a second cancer.
Knowing that level of risk could help clinicians offer genetic
counseling and cancer screening so subsequent malignancies may be
detected at an earlier stage and potentially improve patient survival.
Additionally, 90 percent of osteosarcomas that develop in young people
do not have germline TP53 mutations and further research is needed to
understand those cases.