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Disease | Li-Fraumeni syndrome | |||||
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Inheritance | Autosomal dominant | |||||
Prevalence
| 1-4/20,000 Source:https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/condition/li-fraumeni-syndrome/#frequency | |||||
Rapid or full curation? |
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ClinGen Hereditary Cancer GCEP, accessed 07.14.20 | ||||||
Clinical Validity Scoring Notes and points | TP53 was first reported in relation to autosomal dominant Li-Fraumeni syndrome in 1991 (Malkin et al., 1991, PMID: 1978757; Li et al., 1998, PMID: 3409256). Li Fraumeni is associated with increased risk of multiple pediatric and adult malignancies (see discussion below). Numerous variants have been reported in TP53 in relation to the development of Li-Fraumeni syndrome and include missense, small duplications, small deletions, frameshift, and nonsense mutations have been reported in humans. De novo inheritance has been noted in Li-Fraumeni syndrome in 7-20% of cases (Schneider et al., OMID: 20301488; Gene Reviews). There are several databases describing TP53 variants of interest in Li-Fraumeni Syndrome, including: (1) the TP53 database in LOVD (https://databases.lovd.nl/shared/genes/TP53) ; (2) The TP53 Website (http://p53.fr/) (Leroy et al, 2013; PMID: 23161690) which houses the IARC TP53 database (http://p53.iarc.fr/) (Olivier et al., 2002, PMID: 12007217); (3) Database of germline p53 mutations (http://stary.lf2.cuni.cz/projects/germline_mut_p53.htm); (4) The UMD TP53 website (http://www.umd.be:2072/IFAMTP53A.shtml). There is significant genetic evidence supporting this gene-disease relationship includes case-level data and segregation data and the maximum score for genetic evidence (12 points) has been reached. This gene-disease relationship is also supported by expression studies and multiple animal models that get LFS associated tumors. TP53 has been associated with several disease entities and/or phenotypes through germline inheritance, including: (1) Adrenocortical carcinoma, pediatric (MIM: 202300); (2) Bone marrow failure syndrome (MIM: 5618165); (3) Choroid plexus papilloma (MIM: 260500); (4) Colorectal cancer (MIM: 114500); (5) Li-Fraumeni syndrome (MIM: 151623); (6) Osteosarcoma (MIM: 259500). Although isolated cases of cancer have been observed in individuals with TP53 variation, all are associated with the heterogeneous Li Fraumeni cancer syndrome. Classic Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) is characterized by the development of a sarcoma before the age of 45 years old and one additional first- or second- degree relative in the same lineage with a cancer (Li et al., 1988 PMID: 3409256). Other definitions of Li-Fraumeni like disorder or the Chompret criteria are similar, but not all isolated individuals with a cancer diagnosis have family history information. The inheritance pattern for all the listed, asserted disease entities is autosomal dominant. The molecular mechanism of TP53 dysfunction for all the associated disease entities listed above are either loss of function or dominant negative; both of which result in reduced (or absent) transcriptional activity and loss of the tumor suppressive function of the p53 protein function. Per the criteria outlined by the ClinGen Lumping and Splitting Working Group, we have found no difference in molecular mechanism, inheritance pattern, or phenotypic expressivity, and therefore have lumped the above listed disease entities into the curation for TP53 in Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. In summary, TP53 is definitively associated with autosomal dominant Li-Fraumeni syndrome. This has been repeatedly demonstrated in both the research and clinical diagnostic settings, and has been upheld over time. | |||||
Clinical Validity Points Total | 18 Source: ClinGen Hereditary Cancer GCEP, accessed 07.14.20 | |||||
Clinical Validity Classification
| Definitive Source: ClinGen Hereditary Cancer GCEP, accessed 07.14.20 | |||||
Molecular Mechanism
| Loss-of-function OR dominant negative ClinGen Hereditary Cancer GCEP, accessed 07.14.20 | |||||
Penetrance
(list source/PMID) | High (age-related) Source: PMID: 20301488 Between 70% (men) and 80-90% (women) lifetime risks, though penetrance may be overestimated in the literature. | |||||
Age of Onset
(list source/PMID) | Pediatric - adulthood Source: PMID: 20301488 | |||||
Severity
| Moderate | |||||
Clinical Features | Cancer predisposition syndrome:
Sources: PMID: 20301488 | |||||
HPO terms | Adrenocortical carcinoma HP:0006744 Breast carcinoma HP:0003002 Neoplasm of the central nervous system HP:0100006 Osteosarcoma HP:0002669 Soft tissue sarcoma HP:0030448 Leukemia HP:0001909 Lymphoma HP:0002665 Gastrointestinal carcinoma HP:0002672 | |||||
Gene SOPs & Notes | Variant Scoring Guidelines from TP53 VCEP (version 1.4.0): PS4 (case counting): Points per proband is dependant upon whether the individual meets classic or Chompret criteriaClonal hematopoisis - NEED A WORKFLOW FOR THIS
PS2/PM6 scoring (de novo):Clonal hematopoisis Sources:
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Curation Summary:
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Case ID, Curator name, Date, Jira ticket link |
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