Investigator

Rachel Williams

Senior Genetic Counsellor · Prince of Wales Hospital Cancer Services, Hereditary Cancer

RWRachel Williams
Papers(1)
Cancer Risks Associat…
Collaborators(10)
Wendy KohlmannAinsley CampbellAmanda B. SpurdleBing-Jian FengConxi LázaroCourtney CarrollCristina FortunoDavid GoldgarDavid M. ThomasGiovanni Innella
Institutions(7)
Unsw SydneyUniversity of UtahAustin HealthQimr Berghofer Medica…Institut Catal Doncol…Australian Genomic Ca…Alma Mater Studiorum …

Papers

Cancer Risks Associated With TP53 Pathogenic Variants: Maximum Likelihood Analysis of Extended Pedigrees for Diagnosis of First Cancers Beyond the Li-Fraumeni Syndrome Spectrum

PURPOSE Establishing accurate age-related penetrance figures for the broad range of cancer types that occur in individuals harboring a pathogenic germline variant in the TP53 gene is essential to determine the most effective clinical management strategies. These figures also permit optimal use of cosegregation data for classification of TP53 variants of unknown significance. Penetrance estimation can easily be affected by bias from ascertainment criteria, an issue not commonly addressed by previous studies. MATERIALS AND METHODS We performed a maximum likelihood penetrance estimation using full pedigree data from a multicenter study of 146 TP53-positive families, incorporating adjustment for the effect of ascertainment and population-specific background cancer risks. The analysis included pedigrees from Australia, Spain, and United States, with phenotypic information for 4,028 individuals. RESULTS Core Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) cancers (breast cancer, adrenocortical carcinoma, brain cancer, osteosarcoma, and soft tissue sarcoma) had the highest hazard ratios of all cancers analyzed in this study. The analysis also detected a significantly increased lifetime risk for a range of cancers not previously formally associated with TP53 pathogenic variant status, including colorectal, gastric, lung, pancreatic, and ovarian cancers. The cumulative risk of any cancer type by age 50 years was 92.4% (95% CI, 82.2 to 98.3) for females and 59.7% (95% CI, 39.9 to 81.3) for males. Females had a 63.3% (95% CI, 35.6 to 90.1) cumulative risk of developing breast cancer by age 50 years. CONCLUSION The results from maximum likelihood analysis confirm the known high lifetime risk for the core LFS-associated cancer types providing new risk estimates and indicate significantly increased lifetime risks for several additional cancer types. Accurate cancer risk estimates will help refine clinical recommendations for TP53 pathogenic variant carriers and improve TP53 variant classification.

14Works
1Papers
19Collaborators

Positions

2007–

Senior Genetic Counsellor

Prince of Wales Hospital Cancer Services · Hereditary Cancer

Education

2010

B.Sc., Grad Dip Genetic Counselling/Ms

UNSW Prince of Wales Clinical School · Hereditary Cancer

2007

B.Sc., Grad Dip Genetic Counselling

Saint Vincent's Hospital Sydney · Family Cancer Clinic

Country

AU

Keywords
Genetic Counselingcancer geneticshereditary cancerfamilial cancer