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  • MLH1-methylated endometrial...
    Hitchins, Megan P.; Alvarez, Rocio; Zhou, Lisa; Aguirre, Francesca; Dámaso, Estela; Pineda, Marta; Capella, Gabriel; Wong, Justin J.-L.; Yuan, Xiaopu; Ryan, Shawnia R.; Sathe, Devika S.; Baxter, Melanie D.; Cannon, Timothy; Biswas, Rakesh; DeMarco, Tiffani; Grzelak, Doreen; Hampel, Heather; Pearlman, Rachel

    Gynecologic oncology, 04/2023, Letnik: 171
    Journal Article

    Universal screening of endometrial carcinoma (EC) for mismatch repair deficiency (MMRd) and Lynch syndrome uses presence of MLH1 methylation to omit common sporadic cases from follow-up germline testing. However, this overlooks rare cases with high-risk constitutional MLH1 methylation (epimutation), a poorly-recognized mechanism that predisposes to Lynch-type cancers with MLH1 methylation. We aimed to determine the role and frequency of constitutional MLH1 methylation among EC cases with MMRd, MLH1-methylated tumors. We screened blood for constitutional MLH1 methylation using pyrosequencing and real-time methylation-specific PCR in patients with MMRd, MLH1-methylated EC ascertained from (i) cancer clinics (n = 4, <60 years), and (ii) two population-based cohorts; “Columbus-area” (n = 68, all ages) and “Ohio Colorectal Cancer Prevention Initiative (OCCPI)” (n = 24, <60 years). Constitutional MLH1 methylation was identified in three out of four patients diagnosed between 36 and 59 years from cancer clinics. Two had mono−/hemiallelic epimutation (∼50% alleles methylated). One with multiple primaries had low-level mosaicism in normal tissues and somatic “second-hits” affecting the unmethylated allele in all tumors, demonstrating causation. In the population-based cohorts, all 68 cases from the Columbus-area cohort were negative and low-level mosaic constitutional MLH1 methylation was identified in one patient aged 36 years out of 24 from the OCCPI cohort, representing one of six (∼17%) patients <50 years and one of 45 patients (∼2%) <60 years in the combined cohorts. EC was the first/dual-first cancer in three patients with underlying constitutional MLH1 methylation. A correct diagnosis at first presentation of cancer is important as it will significantly alter clinical management. Screening for constitutional MLH1 methylation is warranted in patients with early-onset EC or synchronous/metachronous tumors (any age) displaying MLH1 methylation. •High-risk constitutional MLH1 methylation underlies a significant proportion of early-onset EC with tumor MLH1 methylation.•EC with tumor MLH1 methylation is sometimes the ‘sentinel’ cancer in women with constitutional MLH1 methylation.•Low-level mosaic constitutional MLH1 methylation confers high-risk for MLH1-methylated cancers including EC.•Constitutional MLH1 methylation testing is warranted in cases with early-onset, or prior history of, MLH1-methylated cancer.