Importance: To date, no environmental factors and few therapeutic options are known for uveal melanoma (UM), the most common malignant intraocular primary tumor in adults. Identification of new predisposition factors could lead to better monitoring and possibly improved treatments of patients with UM.
Objective: To identify new genetic alterations predisposing for UM.
Design, setting, and participants: This was a prospective cohort study conducted at Institut Curie in Paris, France, among 381 consecutive patients diagnosed with UM between July 2021 and February 2023. UM was diagnosed clinically by ophthalmologists, and a senior pathologist confirmed the diagnosis when tumor or biopsy was available. All participants received genetic counseling and consented to extended genetic testing. A panel of 122 genes predisposing to cancer were analyzed by targeted sequencing on germline DNA from these patients.
Main outcomes and measures: Frequency of pathogenic variants (PVs) in genes from a targeted panel, with classification of germline PVs done according to the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics guidelines and the French Unicancer Genetics Group.
Results: A total of 79 PVs were identified in 70 participants (41 female and 29 male; mean [SD] age, 60.6 [15.3] years). Among them, 21 were found in clinically relevant genes, with an enrichment in the mismatch repair (MMR) genes, involved in Lynch syndrome, a frequent predisposition to colon and endometrial cancers. This finding suggested MMR germline PVs could also predispose to UM. One tumor was available from a participant carrying a MLH1 germline PV. The tumor exhibited a monosomy 3 with loss of the wild-type allele of MLH1, located on chromosome 3. Loss of expression of MLH1 was observed by immunohistochemistry, and MMR variant signatures SBS6, ID1, and ID2 were identified from the whole-genome sequencing of this tumor, supporting the possibility that MLH1 contributes to the oncogenesis of this UM.
Conclusions and relevance: This prospective germline study on patients with UM provided evidence supporting the notion that MMR germline alterations are enriched among patients with UM and may contribute to oncogenesis of UM, and that UM may therefore be a rare tumor manifestation of Lynch syndrome.