The Capital

Screenings hold clues, but anomalies raise fears

Patients increasing­ly face inconclusi­ve results as panel tests include more genes

- By Christina Bennett

When her gynecologi­st recommende­d genetic testing, Mai Tran was reluctant.

“I didn’t really want to do it,” recalled Tran, who had just turned 21 and was living in New York City, “but she kept on emailing me about it and was really adamant that I do it.”

Tran knew she had an elevated risk of developing breast cancer because of her family history — her mother died of the disease and a maternal aunt was diagnosed and survived. Given this, she planned to follow the standard recommenda­tions to begin breast cancer screenings at an early age.

But she feared that if the testing her doctor was suggesting revealed a genetic variation known to cause breast cancer, she would have to decide whether to have her breasts surgically removed. That was a decision she was not ready to make.

Doctors are increasing­ly testing people’s genes for signs of hereditary risks for cancer, said Dr. Allison Kurian, a medical oncologist and the director of the Women’s Clinical Cancer Genetics Program at Stanford University. If the tests find a genetic variation known to cause cancer, treatments or preventive measures may be recommende­d to prevent the disease, she said.

But the trend can unsettle patients such as Tran, sometimes unnecessar­ily, because many genetic findings are ambiguous, leaving doctors uncertain about whether a particular variant is truly dangerous.

Multiple-gene panel tests emerged in 2012 and the number of genes covered in these panels has since ballooned, with tests that include more than 80 genes associated with cancer commonly available.

However, the chances of finding an inconclusi­ve result — which can be troubling for patients and confusing for doctors to interpret — rises as more genes are tested. A study by Kurian showed that multiple-gene screening was 10 times more likely to find inconclusi­ve results than a test that examines only two genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2, long associated with a higher risk of breast and ovarian cancer.

An inconclusi­ve result is known within the medical community as a variant of uncertain significan­ce, or VUS. It may be a harmless variation in a gene — or one linked to cancer.

Detecting such variations is common. A review showed the percentage of patients who learn they have a VUS after multiplege­ne panel testing varied in studies from 20% to 40%.

“The larger the panel someone orders, the more likely we are to find one or even multiple variants of uncertain significan­ce,” said genetic counselor Meagan Farmer, director of genetic clinical operations at My Gene Counsel, a Connecticu­t company that provides online genetic counseling tools.

Farmer has seen patients change their minds when she informs them of this reality. “That patient that thought they wanted everything (tested) might then kind of scale back what they were looking for.”

Kurian said patients can be tested for all the cancer genes available as long as they understand that the analysis of many genes will likely not be informativ­e. Several years later, if more evidence accumulate­s for a particular gene, those results may inform medical decisions. “It’s not wrong” to conduct the tests, she said. “But it needs to be appropriat­ely handled by all parties.”

In fall 2018, having never heard of a VUS, Tran settled on the most comprehens­ive screening: a gene panel that at the time evaluated 67 genes for various cancer types.

Testing revealed that Tran had a VUS in a gene associated with Lynch syndrome, a hereditary condition that increases the risk of developing colon cancer, uterine cancer and other cancers. The genetic counselor explained the VUS was inconclusi­ve and should not be used to inform medical decisions.

Although Tran does not dwell on the VUS, the testing process itself caused emotional turmoil.

“I really did the test mostly for my doctor and not for myself,” Tran said. “If I could have chosen, I would not have done it.”

But other patients are more unnerved by uncertain results. “The VUS is scary because it’s a crapshoot,” said Logan Marcus, of Beverly Hills, California. She has a rare variation in BRCA1 that one genetic testing company said is “likely pathogenic” and another said is a “VUS.”

A genetic variant found in testing can be classified — in decreasing severity — as “pathogenic,” “likely pathogenic,” “VUS,” “likely benign” or “benign,” and studies have shown that commercial laboratori­es and companies sometimes disagree on how to classify a variant.

The consensus among experts is not to make medical decisions, such as whether to have surgery, based on a VUS because it often turns out to be benign as more research is done and more people are tested.

Yet, doctors who do not have training in genetics often don’t follow that advice.

Researcher­s recently found evidence that doctors may be inappropri­ately recommendi­ng surgery based on a VUS. The results were presented virtually at the 2020 American Society of Clinical

Oncology annual meeting.

More than 7,000 women were surveyed about their experience with multiple-gene panel testing, and among those with a VUS in a gene associated with ovarian cancer, 15% had their ovaries and fallopian tubes removed. Surgery was not warranted for these women because experts say a VUS should not be used to make medical decisions.

In another study, Farmer and her colleagues described instances when health care providers ordered the wrong genetic test or misinterpr­eted the results. Other researcher­s found that nearly half of 100 surveyed doctors were unable to correctly define a VUS.

Experts say patients who learn they have a VUS or receive conflictin­g results should see a provider with expertise in genetics, such as a genetic counselor or clinical cancer geneticist, especially if surgery is being recommende­d.

Having had multiple relatives with cancer and after seeking advice from a genetic counselor, Marcus plans to have a double mastectomy to prevent breast cancer, but she’s unsure whether she’ll have her ovaries removed to prevent ovarian cancer. At age 39, she has not had children yet.

“This has been a twoplus-year struggle for me,” said Marcus. “I felt very alone, and nobody could give me any answers.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? If testing finds a genetic variation known to cause cancer, treatments or other measures may be recommende­d.
DREAMSTIME If testing finds a genetic variation known to cause cancer, treatments or other measures may be recommende­d.

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