Clinical Oncology: Case Reports

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Case Report, Clin Oncol Case Rep Vol: 4 Issue: 12

A Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer (HBOC) Patient with Metastatic Breast Cancer Lacking BRCA Loss of Heterozygosity (LOH) but Responding to PARP Inhibitor Therapy

Steven Sorscher*

Department of Medicine, Oncology Division, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd, U.S.A

*Corresponding Author : Steven Sorscher
Department of Medicine, Oncology Division, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, U.S.A
Tel: 336-713-1717
E-mail: ssorsche@wakehealth.edu

Received: December 16, 2021 Accepted: December 27, 2021 Published: January 06, 2022

Citation: Sorscher S (2021) A Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer (HBOC) Patient with Metastatic Breast Cancer Lacking BRCA Loss of Heterozygosity (LOH) but Responding to PARP Inhibitor Therapy. Clin Oncol Case Rep 4:12.

Abstract

A germline (gl) pathogenic BRCA alteration or mutation is the molecular basis for diagnosing an individual with Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer (HBOC) syndrome, the most common inherited breast cancer-predisposing syndrome. The gatekeeper or transforming event almost always involves BRCA Loss of Heterozygosity (LOH), which results in loss of expression of normal BRCA protein. Recently, the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) approved PARP inhibitor therapy for patients harboring a gl BRCA alteration who have metastatic breast cancer based on a 59.9% response rate of these tumors to PARP inhibitor therapy. Here, a patient with a gl BRCA pathogenic alteration whose metastatic breast cancer responded to PARP inhibitor therapy is described. However, next-generation sequencing (NGS) liquid biopsy (cell-free (cf) DNA demonstrated no apparent BRCA LOH (the molecular hallmark of BRCA-related breast cancers) and therefore the response of her tumor to the PARP inhibitor would be unexpected. PARP inhibitor therapy would be expected to be effective only if the tumor lacked normal BRCA protein expression, as is seen with BRCA LOH in tumor-derived DNA. The challenges involved in confirming BRCA LOH based on mutant allelic frequency (MAF) in the cf DNA NGS assay are discussed as well as possible explanations for the demonstrated radiographic response to the PARP inhibitor, despite the apparent lack of BRCA LOH. 

Keywords: BRCA; Mutant allelic frequency; Breast cancer; PARP inhibitor

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