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The complex genetic landscape of familial MDS and AML reveals pathogenic germline variants.

Ana Rio-MachinTom VulliamyNele HugAmanda WalneKiran TawanaShirleny CardosoAlicia EllisonNikolas PontikosJun WangHemanth TummalaAhad Fahad H Al SeraihiJenna AlnajarFindlay Bewicke-CopleyHannah ArmesMichael BarnettAdrian BloorCsaba BödörDavid BowenPierre FenauxAndrew GreenAndrew HallahanHenrik Hjorth-HansenUpal HossainSally KillickSarah LawsonMark LaytonAlison M MaleJudith MarshPriyanka MehtaRogier MousJosep F NomdedéuCarolyn OwenJiří PavlůElspeth M PayneRachel E ProtheroeClaude PreudhommeNuria Pujol-MoixAline RennevilleNigel RussellAnand SaggarGabriela SciuccatiDavid TaussigCynthia L TozeAnne UyttebroeckPeter VandenbergheBrigitte SchlegelbergerTim RippergerDoris SteinemannJohn WuJoanne MasonPaula PageSusanna AkikiKim ReayJamie D CavenaghVincent PlagnolJavier F CaceresJude FitzgibbonInderjeet Dokal
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
The inclusion of familial myeloid malignancies as a separate disease entity in the revised WHO classification has renewed efforts to improve the recognition and management of this group of at risk individuals. Here we report a cohort of 86 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) families with 49 harboring germline variants in 16 previously defined loci (57%). Whole exome sequencing in a further 37 uncharacterized families (43%) allowed us to rationalize 65 new candidate loci, including genes mutated in rare hematological syndromes (ADA, GP6, IL17RA, PRF1 and SEC23B), reported in prior MDS/AML or inherited bone marrow failure series (DNAH9, NAPRT1 and SH2B3) or variants at novel loci (DHX34) that appear specific to inherited forms of myeloid malignancies. Altogether, our series of MDS/AML families offer novel insights into the etiology of myeloid malignancies and provide a framework to prioritize variants for inclusion into routine diagnostics and patient management.
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