International PPB/DICER1 Registry

NCT03382158RecruitingOBSERVATIONAL

Summary

Key Facts

Lead Sponsor

Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota

Enrollment

3400

Start Date

2016-12-06

Completion Date

2030-12-06

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Official Title

International Pleuropulmonary Blastoma/DICER1 Registry (for PPB, DICER1 and Associated Conditions)

Conditions

Pleuropulmonary BlastomaSertoli-Leydig Cell TumorDICER1 SyndromeCystic NephromaWilms TumorPineoblastomaRenal SarcomaNodular Hyperplasia of ThyroidNasal Chondromesenchymal HamartomaCiliary Body MedulloepitheliomaNeuroblastomaPituitary CancerEmbryonal RhabdomyosarcomaOvarian SarcomaGynandroblastomaThyroid CarcinomaEmbryonal Rhabdomyosarcoma of Vagina (Diagnosis)Embryonal Rhabdomyosarcoma of Uterus (Diagnosis)Embryonal Rhabdomyosarcoma of Cervix

Eligibility

Age Range

0 Minutes – 100 Years

Sex

ALL

Inclusion Criteria:

1. Known or suspected PPB or related thoracic tumor
2. Known or suspected sex-cord stromal tumor including Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor and gynandroblastoma (males or females)
3. Other known or suspected DICER1-related condition including ovarian sarcoma, cystic nephroma, renal sarcoma, pineoblastoma, pituitary blastoma, nasal chondromesenchymal hamartoma, ciliary body medulloepithelioma and others
4. Individuals with known or suspected DICER1 pathogenic variation regardless of whether they have an established DICER1-associated condition
5. Informed consent by patient/ or parent/guardian (also, where appropriate: assent and HIPAA consent)

Exclusion criteria:

Absence of appropriate consent for Registry participation

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes

Event-free survival

The primary endpoint for statistical analysis will be time from start treatment to an event, defined as the occurrence of progression or recurrence of PPB, occurrence of a second malignant neoplasm, or death from any cause that is at least possibly related to the original disease or treatment.

Time frame: 7 years

Secondary Outcomes

Overall response to chemotherapy

The investigators will assess overall response to chemotherapy among participants with radiographically measurable tumor following initial surgery or biopsy.

Time frame: 7 years

Overall survival

The investigators will assess overall survival and time to death from any cause among participants.

Time frame: 7 years

Quality of life outcomes in individuals diagnosed with PPB.

Chemotherapy and surgery may have adverse effects on the quality of life outcomes. Multiple factors may impact quality of life for participants.This study will allow the investigators to assess the quality of life outcomes in participants with DICER1-related tumors and will compare outcomes to those with more common childhood cancers.

Time frame: 7 years

Cardiac outcomes in individuals diagnosed with PPB.

Chemotherapy and surgery may have adverse effects on cardiac outcomes. This study will allow the investigators to assess the cardiac outcomes as measured by ejection fraction and shortening fraction via echocardiogram of participants with DICER1-related tumors, and compare outcomes to those with more common childhood cancers.

Time frame: 7 years

Pulmonary function testing results in individuals diagnosed with PPB

Chemotherapy and surgery may have adverse effects on pulmonary outcomes. This study will allow the investigators to assess the pulmonary outcome of participants as ascertained by pulmonary function testing (forced vital capacity (FVC), FEV1(forced expiratory volume in 1 second)/FVC) with DICER1-related tumors, and compare outcomes to those with more common childhood cancers.

Time frame: 7 years

Incidence of neoplasms in individuals with DICER1-related conditions or germline DICER1 variants. mutation.

This protocol will include individuals with germline DICER1 mutations and will calculate incidence rates of specific neoplasms in this population

Time frame: 7 years

Locations

Children's Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States

Linked Papers

2021-02-01

A Genome-First Approach to Characterize DICER1 Pathogenic Variant Prevalence, Penetrance, and Phenotype

Genetic disorders are historically defined through phenotype-first approaches. However, risk estimates derived from phenotype-linked ascertainment may overestimate severity and penetrance. Pathogenic variants in DICER1 are associated with increased risks of rare and common neoplasms and thyroid disease in adults and children. This study explored how effectively a genome-first approach could characterize the clinical traits associated with germline DICER1 putative loss-of-function (pLOF) variants in an unselected clinical cohort. To examine the prevalence, penetrance, and phenotypic characteristics of carriers of germline DICER1 pLOF variants via genome-first ascertainment. This cohort study classifies DICER1 variants in germline exome sequence data from 92 296 participants of the Geisinger MyCode Community Health Initiative. Data for each MyCode participant were used from the start of the Geisinger electronic health record to February 1, 2018. Prevalence of germline DICER1 variation; penetrance of malignant tumors and thyroid disease in carriers of germline DICER1 variation; structured, manual review of electronic health records; and DICER1 sequencing of available tumors from an associated cancer registry. A total of 92 296 adults (mean [SD] age, 59 [18] years; 98% white; 60% female) participated in the study. Germline DICER1 pLOF variants were observed in 1 in 3700 to 1 in 4600 participants, more than double the expected prevalence. Malignant tumors (primarily thyroid carcinoma) were observed in 4 of 25 participants (16%) with DICER1 pLOF variants, which is comparable (by 50 years of age) to the frequency of neoplasms in the largest registry- and clinic-based (phenotype-first) DICER1 studies published to date. DICER1 pLOF variants were significantly associated with risks of thyroidectomy (odds ratio [OR], 6.0; 95% CI, 2.2-16.3; P = .007) and thyroid cancer (OR, 9.2; 95% CI, 2.1-34.7; P = .02) compared with controls, but there was not a significant increase in the risk of goiter (OR, 1.8; 95% CI, 0.7-4.9). A female patient in her 80s who was a carrier of a germline DICER1 hotspot variant was apparently healthy on electronic health record review. The term DICER1 did not appear in any of the medical records of the 25 participants with a pLOF DICER1 variant, even in those affected with a known DICER1-associated tumor or thyroid phenotype. This cohort study was able to ascertain individuals with germline DICER1 variants based on a genome-first approach rather than through a previously established DICER1-related phenotype. Use of the genome-first approach may complement more traditional approaches to syndrome delineation and may be an efficient approach for risk estimation.

2020-01-15

Gynecologic and reproductive health in patients with pathogenic germline variants in DICER1

Germline pathogenic variation in DICER1 underlies a tumor-predisposition disorder with increased risk for cervical embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma and ovarian sex-cord stromal tumors, particularly Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors. The gynecologic and reproductive health of these females has not yet been described. All female subjects recruited from November 2011 to July 2018 participating in an epidemiologic study of families with pathogenic DICER1 germline variation were included in this cross-sectional analysis. Participant evaluation included obstetric-gynecologic history, physical examination, hormone testing, pelvic ultrasound and record review. Of 64 females aged 2-72 years, fifteen underwent treatment for pleuropulmonary blastoma as children and three were treated for cervical embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. Of nine patients reporting a history of ovarian tumors, all presented with virilization or amenorrhea; eight occurred in adolescence. Post-pubertal females with no history of ovarian tumors experienced normal pubertal development, reported regular menstrual cycles, were fertile and underwent natural menopause at median age of 52 years. Thirty-two of 33 women who tried to conceive successfully delivered liveborn children. Of these 32, 10 experienced pregnancy-related thyroid enlargement resulting in thyroidectomy within one year of pregnancy; nine others had undergone pre-pregnancy thyroidectomy. In these DICER1-carrier females, DICER1-related gynecological tumors occurred during childhood or adolescence in some after which women generally experienced healthy reproductive lives. Individual education and screening for these tumors is warranted. The high rate of DICER1-related multinodular goiter resulting in pre- and post-pregnancy thyroidectomy underscores the importance of thyroid monitoring during pregnancy to ensure maternal and fetal wellbeing.