Genotype-specific neoplastic risk profiles in patients with VHL disease

Abstract

Hereditary tumor predisposition syndromes pose a challenge for early detection and timely treatment of tumors. In von Hippel–Lindau disease, desirable personalized surveillance programs are lacking due to insufficient data on genotype-specific risk profiles of individual mutations. To describe neoplastic risk profiles for carriers of pathogenic and likely pathogenic VHL germline mutations, our observational study recruited 1,350 participants from 40 centers worldwide. 432 different VHL germline mutations were observed, with p.Asn78Ser, p.Arg161Ter, p.Arg161Gln, p.Arg167Gln, p.Arg167Trp and p.Tyr98His being the six most frequent, occurring in a total of 493 carriers (36.5%) and in ≥30 patients each. Age-related penetrance risks for retinal hemangioblastoma, central nervous system hemangioblastoma, renal cell carcinoma, pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors and pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma in carriers of the most frequent VHL mutations were assessed. In addition, the number of organs affected, the frequency of surgery and the outcome are reported. Pairwise comparisons of the age-dependent tumor penetrance of these six mutations showed that 47 out of 90 pairs were significantly different. The most significant associations were found in p.Tyr98His (n = 19), followed by p.Arg161Ter (n = 10). All pairwise comparisons of mutations affecting different codons showed at least one significant (P < 0.05) difference, except for p.Asn78Ser vs p.Arg161Ter. Thus, tumor risk varied by VHL mutation type and location, but did not differ between the truncating mutation p.Arg161Ter and the missense mutation p.Asn78Ser. Our study demonstrates the importance of mutation-specific phenotype prediction. With appropriate validation, the data have important implications for risk assessment and decision making in tumor prevention for carriers of the respective VHL mutations.

Publication DOI: https://doi.org/10.1530/erc-24-0260
Divisions: College of Health & Life Sciences > Aston Medical School
Funding Information: The study was supported in part by grants from the European Union (grant LSHC-CT-2005-518200) and the German Cancer Foundation (grant 107995) to HPHN; by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – Project-ID 431984000-SFB 1453
Additional Information: Copyright © the author(s) 2025. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Uncontrolled Keywords: von Hippel-Lindau disease,genotype-phenotype,tumor risk profiles,personalized preventive medicine
Publication ISSN: 1479-6821
Last Modified: 30 May 2025 16:01
Date Deposited: 29 May 2025 13:45
Full Text Link:
Related URLs: https://erc.bio ... ERC-24-0260.xml (Publisher URL)
PURE Output Type: Article
Published Date: 2025-04-28
Published Online Date: 2025-04-09
Accepted Date: 2025-03-21
Authors: Ganner, Athina
Ferrara, Alfonso Massimiliano
Sekula, Peggy
Schiavi, Francesca
Joo, Julia H
Sanso, Gabriela
Almeida, Madson Q
Knoblauch, Anna Laura
Gizaw, Christine Julia
Krzystolik, Karol
Maher, Eamonn R.
Neumann, Hartmut P. H.
Neumann-Haefelin, Elke
(over 30 authors), et al

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