DICER1 syndrome: Clarifying the diagnosis, clinical features and management implications of a pleiotropic tumour predisposition syndrome

Ingrid Slade, Chiara Bacchelli, Helen Davies, Anne Murray, Fatemeh Abbaszadeh, Sandra Hanks, Rita Barfoot, Amos Burke, Julia Chisholm, Martin Hewitt, Helen Jenkinson, Derek King, Bruce Morland, Barry Pizer, Katrina Prescott, Anand Saggar, Lucy Side, Heidi Traunecker, Sucheta Vaidya, Paul WardP. Andrew Futreal, Gordan Vujanic, Andrew G. Nicholson, Neil Sebire, Clare Turnbull, John R. Priest, Kathryn Pritchard-Jones, Richard Houlston, Charles Stiller, Michael R. Stratton, Jenny Douglas, Nazneen Rahman*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Constitutional DICER1 mutations were recently reported to cause familial pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB). Aim: To investigate the contribution and phenotypic spectrum of constitutional and somatic DICER1 mutations to cancer. Methods and results: The authors sequenced DICER1 in constitutional DNA from 823 unrelated patients with a variety of tumours and in 781 cancer cell lines. Constitutional DICER1 mutations were identified in 19 families including 11/14 with PPB, 2/3 with cystic nephroma, 4/7 with ovarian Sertoli-Leydig-type tumours, 1/243 with Wilms tumour (this patient also had a Sertoli-Leydig tumour), 1/1 with intraocular medulloepithelioma (this patient also had PPB), 1/86 with medulloblastoma/infratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumour, and 1/172 with germ cell tumour. The inheritance was investigated in 17 families. DICER1 mutations were identified in 25 relatives: 17 were unaffected, one mother had ovarian Sertoli-Leydig tumour, one half-sibling had cystic nephroma, and six relatives had non-toxic thyroid cysts/goitre. Analysis of eight tumours from DICER1 mutation-positive patients showed universal retention of the wild-type allele. DICER1 truncating mutations were identified in 4/781 cancer cell lines; all were in microsatellite unstable lines and therefore unlikely to be driver mutations. Conclusion: Constitutional DICER1 haploinsufficiency predisposes to a broad range of tumours, making a substantial contribution to PPB, cystic nephroma and ovarian Sertoli-Leydig tumours, but a smaller contribution to other tumours. Most mutation carriers are unaffected, indicating that tumour risk is modest. The authors define the clinical contexts in which DICER1 mutation testing should be considered, the associated tumour risks, and the implications for at-risk individuals. They have termed this condition 'DICER1 syndrome'.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)273-278
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Medical Genetics
Volume48
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2011

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics
  • Genetics(clinical)

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