Significantly increased load of hereditary cancer-linked germline variants in infertile men.

IF 8.3 Q1 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Human reproduction open Pub Date : 2025-02-21 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/hropen/hoaf008
Anu Valkna, Anna-Grete Juchnewitsch, Lisanna Põlluaas, Kristiina Lillepea, Stanislav Tjagur, Avirup Dutta, Kristjan Pomm, Margus Punab, Maris Laan
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Our recent study observed a 4-fold increased prevalence of cancer in men with monogenic infertility compared to the general male population (8% vs 2%). Shared molecular etiologies of male infertility and cancer have been proposed.</p><p><strong>Study design size duration: </strong>This retrospective study analyzed germline likely pathogenic and pathogenic (LP/P) variants in 157 hereditary cancer genes in 522 infertile and 323 fertile men recruited to the ESTonian ANDrology (ESTAND) cohort.</p><p><strong>Participants/materials setting methods: </strong>All study participants (n = 845) had been recruited and phenotyped at an Andrology Clinic. Identification of LP/P variants in the cancer gene panel was performed from an exome sequencing dataset generated for the study cohort. All variants passed an automated filtering process, final manual assessment of pathogenicity, and experimental confirmation using Sanger sequencing. 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Future studies will reveal whether this observation is a by chance or replicable finding.Most hereditary cancer genes with LP/P variants show high expression in one or more testicular cell types, and mouse models for 15 of 24 affected genes have been reported to exhibit male sub- or infertility. These data support shared genetic etiology of impaired spermatogenesis and cancer. A significantly increased fraction of cancer-linked variants in infertile compared to fertile men could also explain the reported high prevalence of cancer as a comorbidity in male infertility.</p><p><strong>Large scale data: </strong>All hereditary cancer-linked variants identified in this study have been submitted to the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) ClinVar database (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/).</p><p><strong>Limitations reasons for caution: </strong>All recruited participants were of white European ancestry and living in Estonia. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Study question: What is the load and profile of hereditary cancer-linked germline variants in infertile compared to fertile men?

Summary answer: This study showed almost 5-fold enrichment of disease-causing findings in hereditary cancer genes in infertile compared to fertile men (6.9% vs 1.5%, P =2.3 × 10-4).

What is known already: Epidemiological studies have revealed that men with low sperm count have a 2-fold higher risk of developing cancer during their lifetime. Our recent study observed a 4-fold increased prevalence of cancer in men with monogenic infertility compared to the general male population (8% vs 2%). Shared molecular etiologies of male infertility and cancer have been proposed.

Study design size duration: This retrospective study analyzed germline likely pathogenic and pathogenic (LP/P) variants in 157 hereditary cancer genes in 522 infertile and 323 fertile men recruited to the ESTonian ANDrology (ESTAND) cohort.

Participants/materials setting methods: All study participants (n = 845) had been recruited and phenotyped at an Andrology Clinic. Identification of LP/P variants in the cancer gene panel was performed from an exome sequencing dataset generated for the study cohort. All variants passed an automated filtering process, final manual assessment of pathogenicity, and experimental confirmation using Sanger sequencing. Retrospective general health records were available for 36 out of 41 (88%) men with LP/P findings.

Main results and the role of chance: Infertile men presented a nearly 5-fold higher load of LP/P findings (36 of 522 cases, 6.9%) compared to fertile subjects (5 of 323, 1.5%; odds ratio (OR) = 4.7, 95% CI 1.81-15.5; P = 2.3 × 10-4) spanning over 24 hereditary cancer genes. The prevalence of findings was not significantly different between azoospermic and oligozoospermic cases. There was also no enrichment of findings in men with a history of cryptorchidism. By the time of the study, six men carrying hereditary cancer variants had been diagnosed with a tumor. Family members affected with cancer had been documented for 10 of 14 cases with available pedigree health data.Nearly half of the infertile men with LP/P findings (17 out of 36) carried variants in genes belonging to the Fanconi anemia (FA) pathway involved in the maintenance of genomic integrity in mitosis and meiosis, repair of DNA double-stranded breaks, and interstrand crosslinks. Overall, FA-pathway genes BRCA2 (monoallelic) and FANCM (biallelic) were the most frequently affected loci (five subjects per gene).LP/P findings in pleiotropic genes linked to human development and hereditary cancer (TSC1, PHOX2B, WT1, SPRED1, NF1, LZTR1, HOXB13) were identified in several patients with syndromic phenotypes. Four cryptorchid infertile men were carriers of MLH1, MSH2, and MSH6 variants implicated in Lynch syndrome. Future studies will reveal whether this observation is a by chance or replicable finding.Most hereditary cancer genes with LP/P variants show high expression in one or more testicular cell types, and mouse models for 15 of 24 affected genes have been reported to exhibit male sub- or infertility. These data support shared genetic etiology of impaired spermatogenesis and cancer. A significantly increased fraction of cancer-linked variants in infertile compared to fertile men could also explain the reported high prevalence of cancer as a comorbidity in male infertility.

Large scale data: All hereditary cancer-linked variants identified in this study have been submitted to the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) ClinVar database (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/).

Limitations reasons for caution: All recruited participants were of white European ancestry and living in Estonia. Thus, the results might not apply to other ethnic groups. Due to the young age of study participants (median age 34.4 years), the true incidence of cancer during lifetime could not be assessed. As retrospective clinical data were not available for all men, it was not possible to evaluate all possible genotype-phenotype links. The absence of genetic data from family members precluded the assessment of the hereditary nature of the variants or their potential de novo occurrence.

Wider implications of the findings: Infertility affects about 7-10% of men worldwide. In this study, one in 15 men with spermatogenic failure carried germline LP/P variants in hereditary cancer genes. As exome sequencing is gradually entering the molecular diagnostics setup in andrology, analyzing hereditary cancer-linked variants in the workup of infertile men will offer additional clinical benefits. Male factor infertility is typically diagnosed in men in their 30s, often before the onset of cancer or its symptoms. Early knowledge of germline predisposition to cancer enables timely screening and multidisciplinary management options, potentially improving the prognosis. The study data provide support for the shared monogenic etiologies of hereditary cancer and spermatogenic failure.

Study funding/competing interests: This study was funded by the Estonian Research Council grant PRG1021 (M.L. and M.P.). The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

不育男性的遗传癌症相关种系变异显著增加。
研究问题:与有生育能力的男性相比,不育男性中遗传性癌症相关生殖系变异的负荷和特征是什么?摘要回答:这项研究显示,不育男性的遗传性癌症基因致病性发现几乎是有生育能力男性的5倍(6.9% vs 1.5%, P = 2.3 × 10-4)。已知情况:流行病学研究表明,精子数量低的男性一生中患癌症的风险要高出两倍。我们最近的研究发现,与普通男性人群相比,单基因不育男性的癌症患病率增加了4倍(8%对2%)。男性不育和癌症的共同分子病因已被提出。研究设计规模持续时间:本回顾性研究分析了爱沙尼亚男科(ESTAND)队列中522名不育和323名可育男性157种遗传癌症基因的可能致病性和致病性(LP/P)变异。参与者/材料设置方法:所有研究参与者(n = 845)均在男科诊所招募并进行表型分析。通过为研究队列生成的外显子组测序数据集,对癌症基因面板中的LP/P变异进行了鉴定。所有变异都通过了自动过滤过程,最终人工评估致病性,并使用Sanger测序进行实验确认。41名有LP/P症状的男性中有36名(88%)可获得回顾性一般健康记录。主要结果和偶然性的作用:不育男性(522例中有36例,6.9%)的LP/P检查结果负荷比有生育能力的男性(323例中有5例,1.5%;优势比(OR) = 4.7, 95% CI 1.81 ~ 15.5;P = 2.3 × 10-4),跨越24个遗传癌基因。无精子和少精子病例的患病率无显著差异。在有隐睾病史的男性中也没有丰富的发现。到研究开始时,六名携带遗传性癌症变异的男性被诊断出患有肿瘤。14例中有10例的家庭成员患有癌症,有家谱健康数据。近一半患有LP/P的不育男性(36人中有17人)携带属于范可尼贫血(FA)途径的基因变异,该途径涉及有丝分裂和减数分裂中基因组完整性的维持,DNA双链断裂的修复以及链间交联。总的来说,fa通路基因BRCA2(单等位基因)和FANCM(双等位基因)是最常受影响的基因座(每个基因5个受试者)。与人类发育和遗传性癌症相关的多效基因(TSC1, PHOX2B, WT1, SPRED1, NF1, LZTR1, HOXB13)的LP/P发现在一些综合征表型患者中。4名隐睾不育男性携带MLH1、MSH2和MSH6变异,与Lynch综合征有关。未来的研究将揭示这一观察结果是偶然的还是可复制的。大多数具有LP/P变异的遗传性癌症基因在一种或多种睾丸细胞类型中表现出高表达,据报道,24种受影响基因中的15种小鼠模型表现出男性亚不育或不育。这些数据支持精子发生受损和癌症的共同遗传病因学。与有生育能力的男性相比,不育男性中癌症相关变异的比例显著增加,这也可以解释癌症作为男性不育合并症的高患病率。大规模数据:本研究中发现的所有与癌症相关的遗传变异都已提交给国家生物技术信息中心(NCBI) ClinVar数据库(https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/clinvar/).Limitations)。注意事项:所有招募的参与者都是居住在爱沙尼亚的欧洲白人血统。因此,结果可能不适用于其他种族群体。由于研究参与者的年龄较小(中位年龄为34.4岁),因此无法评估一生中癌症的真实发病率。由于回顾性临床数据不能用于所有男性,因此不可能评估所有可能的基因型-表型联系。由于缺乏来自家庭成员的遗传数据,因此无法评估变异的遗传性质或其潜在的重新发生。研究结果的更广泛含义:全球约有7-10%的男性患有不育症。在这项研究中,每15名生精失败的男性中就有1人在遗传癌症基因中携带种系LP/P变异。随着外显子组测序逐渐进入男科的分子诊断领域,分析不育男性的遗传癌症相关变异将提供额外的临床益处。男性因素不育症通常在30多岁的男性中被诊断出来,通常在癌症或其症状出现之前。早期了解生殖系易感性的癌症可以及时筛查和多学科的管理选择,潜在地改善预后。 该研究数据为遗传性癌症和生精失败的共同单基因病因提供了支持。研究经费/竞争利益:本研究由爱沙尼亚研究委员会拨款PRG1021 (M.L.和M.P.)资助。作者声明无利益冲突。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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