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Molecular Tumor Testing for Lynch Syndrome in Patients With Colorectal Cancer

Jeremy Matloff, Aimee Lucas, Alexandros D. Polydorides, and Steven H. Itzkowitz

Lynch syndrome (LS) is the most common hereditary colon cancer syndrome, and accounts for 2% to 3% of all colorectal cancers. These tumors are caused by germline mutations of DNA mismatch repair genes, which result in microsatellite instability. Colonic and extracolonic malignancies can occur at a young age, and are often diagnosed at a late stage because of underrecognition of the syndrome. Identifying individuals with LS before the development of these malignancies decreases mortality because of frequent screening and surveillance of colonic and extracolonic cancers. Moreover, family members of these individuals can be tested and begin screening at a young age if appropriate. Classically, Amsterdam criteria and Bethesda guidelines have been used to identify at-risk individuals; however, these tools miss a significant number of cases. As the molecular basis for LS has been clarified, more sophisticated strategies have emerged. Testing all colorectal cancers for loss of mismatch repair proteins, known as universal screening, is a strategy used to identify individuals at risk for LS. This approach has been shown to be more sensitive than previous methods that rely on family history. Implementation of universal tumor testing necessitates a systematic approach to positive results in order to have maximal effect, and could prove to be the most cost-effective approach to reducing cancer mortality in patients with LS.

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The Pancreatic Cancer Early Detection (PRECEDE) Study is a Global Effort to Drive Early Detection: Baseline Imaging Findings in High-Risk Individuals

George Zogopoulos, Ido Haimi, Shenin A. Sanoba, Jessica N. Everett, Yifan Wang, Bryson W. Katona, James J. Farrell, Aaron J. Grossberg, Salvatore Paiella, Kelsey A. Klute, Yan Bi, Michael B. Wallace, Richard S. Kwon, Elena M. Stoffel, Raymond C. Wadlow, Daniel A. Sussman, Nipun B. Merchant, Jennifer B. Permuth, Talia Golan, Maria Raitses-Gurevich, Andrew M. Lowy, Joy Liau, Joanne M. Jeter, James M. Lindberg, Daniel C. Chung, Julie Earl, Teresa A. Brentnall, Kasmintan A. Schrader, Vivek Kaul, Chenchan Huang, Hersh Chandarana, Caroline Smerdon, John J. Graff, Fay Kastrinos, Sonia S. Kupfer, Aimee L. Lucas, Rosalie C. Sears, Randall E. Brand, Giovanni Parmigiani, Diane M. Simeone, and on behalf of the PRECEDE Consortium

Background: Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PC) is a highly lethal malignancy with a survival rate of only 12%. Surveillance is recommended for high-risk individuals (HRIs), but it is not widely adopted. To address this unmet clinical need and drive early diagnosis research, we established the Pancreatic Cancer Early Detection (PRECEDE) Consortium. Methods: PRECEDE is a multi-institutional international collaboration that has undertaken an observational prospective cohort study. Individuals (aged 18–90 years) are enrolled into 1 of 7 cohorts based on family history and pathogenic germline variant (PGV) status. From April 1, 2020, to November 21, 2022, a total of 3,402 participants were enrolled in 1 of 7 study cohorts, with 1,759 (51.7%) meeting criteria for the highest-risk cohort (Cohort 1). Cohort 1 HRIs underwent germline testing and pancreas imaging by MRI/MR-cholangiopancreatography or endoscopic ultrasound. Results: A total of 1,400 participants in Cohort 1 (79.6%) had completed baseline imaging and were subclassified into 3 groups based on familial PC (FPC; n=670), a PGV and FPC (PGV+/FPC+; n=115), and a PGV with a pedigree that does not meet FPC criteria (PGV+/FPC–; n=615). One HRI was diagnosed with stage IIB PC on study entry, and 35.1% of HRIs harbored pancreatic cysts. Increasing age (odds ratio, 1.05; P<.001) and FPC group assignment (odds ratio, 1.57; P<.001; relative to PGV+/FPC–) were independent predictors of harboring a pancreatic cyst. Conclusions: PRECEDE provides infrastructure support to increase access to clinical surveillance for HRIs worldwide, while aiming to drive early PC detection advancements through longitudinal standardized clinical data, imaging, and biospecimen captures. Increased cyst prevalence in HRIs with FPC suggests that FPC may infer distinct biological processes. To enable the development of PC surveillance approaches better tailored to risk category, we recommend adoption of subclassification of HRIs into FPC, PGV+/FPC+, and PGV+/FPC– risk groups by surveillance protocols.