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Dive into the research topics where Alex Teulé is active.

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Featured researches published by Alex Teulé.


Annals of Oncology | 2010

Incidence, patterns of care and prognostic factors for outcome of gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP-NETs): results from the National Cancer Registry of Spain (RGETNE)

R. Garcia-Carbonero; Jaume Capdevila; G. Crespo-Herrero; Jose Angel Diaz‐Perez; M. P. Martínez del Prado; V. Alonso Orduña; I. Sevilla-García; C. Villabona-Artero; A. Beguiristain-Gómez; M. Llanos-Muñoz; Mónica Marazuela; C. Alvarez-Escola; Daniel Castellano; E. Vilar; Paula Jiménez-Fonseca; Alex Teulé; J. Sastre-Valera; M. Benavent-Viñuelas; A. Monleon; R. Salazar

BACKGROUND Neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are an unusual family of neoplasms with a wide and complex spectrum of clinical behavior. Here, we present the first report of a National Cancer Registry of gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors from a Southern European country. PATIENTS AND METHODS Data was provided online at www.retegep.net by participating centers and assessed for internal consistency by external independent reviewers. RESULTS The study cohort comprised 907 tumors. The most common tumor types were carcinoids (55%), pancreatic nonfunctional tumors (20%), metastatic NETs of unknown primary (9%), insulinomas (8%) and gastrinomas (4%). Forty-four percent presented with distant disease at diagnosis, most often those from small intestine (65%), colon (48%), rectum (40%) and pancreas (38%), being most unusual in appendix primaries (1.3%). Stage at diagnosis varied significantly according to sex, localization of primary tumor, tumor type and grade. Overall 5-year survival was 75.4% (95% confidence interval 71.3% to 79.5%) and was significantly greater in women, younger patients and patients with hormonal syndrome and early stage or lower grade tumors. Prognosis also differed according to tumor type and primary tumor site. However, stage and Ki-67 index were the only independent predictors for survival. CONCLUSION This national database reveals relevant information regarding epidemiology, current clinical practices and prognosis of NETs in Spain, providing valuable insights that may contribute to understand regional disparities in the incidence, patterns of care and survival of this heterogeneous disease across different continents and countries.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2012

Detection of a large rearrangement in PALB2 in Spanish breast cancer families with male breast cancer

Ana Blanco; Miguel de la Hoya; Judith Balmaña; Teresa Ramón y Cajal; Alex Teulé; María-Dolores Miramar; Eva Esteban; Mar Infante; Javier Benitez; Asunción Torres; María-Isabel Tejada; Joan Brunet; Begoña Graña; Milagros Balbín; Pedro Pérez-Segura; Ana Alexandra Caldas Osório; Eladio Velasco; Isabel Chirivella; María-Teresa Calvo; Lidia Feliubadaló; Adriana Lasa; Orland Diez; Angel Carracedo; Trinidad Caldés; Ana Vega

It has been demonstrated that monoallelic PALB2 (Partner and Localizer of BRCA2) gene mutations predispose to familial breast cancer. Some of the families reported with germline PALB2 mutations presented male breast cancer as a characteristic clinical feature. Therefore, we wanted to investigate the contribution of germline PALB2 mutations in a set of 131 Spanish BRCA1/BRCA2-negative breast/ovarian cancer families with at least one male breast cancer case. The analysis included direct sequencing of all coding exons and intron/exon boundaries as well as a Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification-based analysis of genomic rearrangements. For the first time we have identified a genomic rearrangement of PALB2 gene involving a large deletion from exon 7 to 11 in a breast cancer family. We have also identified several PALB2 variants, but no other obvious deleterious PALB2 mutation has been found. Thus, our study does not support an enrichment of PALB2 germline mutations in the subset of breast cancer families with male breast cancer cases. The identification of intronic and exonic variants indicates the necessity of assessing the implications of variants that do not lead to PALB2 truncation in the pathoghenicity of the PALB2 gene.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2010

Identification and comprehensive characterization of large genomic rearrangements in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes

Jesús del Valle; Lídia Feliubadaló; Marga Nadal; Alex Teulé; Rosa Miró; Raquel Cuesta; Eva Tornero; Mireia Menéndez; Esther Darder; Joan Brunet; Gabriel Capellá; Ignacio Blanco; Conxi Lázaro

Large genomic rearrangements are estimated to account for approximately 5–10% of all disease-causing mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes in patients with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome (HBOC). We use MRC-Holland Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification (MLPA) to screen for such rearrangements in patients with HBOC and as a first step in our genetic testing workflow. The technique was applied to a set of 310 independent patients and detected eight different copy number alterations, corresponding to 2.6% of the studied samples. MLPA was also found to identify point mutations located in probe sequences. As commercial MLPA tests are not suitable for determining the specific breakpoints or for defining the exact extent of rearrangements, we applied a set of different complementary techniques to characterize these genetic alterations with greater precision. Long-range PCR amplification, RNA analysis, SNP-array chips, non-commercial MLPA probes, and FISH analysis were used to fully define the extent and mechanism of each alteration. In BRCA1, six rearrangements were characterized: deletion of E22, duplication of E9–E24, deletion of E16–E23, deletion of E1–E13, deletion of E1–E2 and duplication of E1–E2. In BRCA2, we studied a deletion of E15–E16 and a deletion of E1–E24. To the best of our knowledge, this is the most comprehensive study of the nature and underlying molecular causes of these mutational events in the BRCA1/2 genes.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2012

Assessing the RNA effect of 26 DNA variants in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes

Mireia Menéndez; Joan Castellsague; Marc Mirete; Eva Pros; Lídia Feliubadaló; Ana Osorio; Mónica Calaf; Eva Tornero; Jesús del Valle; Juana Fernández-Rodríguez; Francisco Quiles; Mónica Salinas; Angela Velasco; Alex Teulé; Joan Brunet; Ignacio Blanco; Gabriel Capellá; Conxi Lázaro

Comprehensive genetic testing of the breast cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 identified approximately 16% of variants of unknown significance (VUS), a significant proportion of which could affect the correct splicing of the genes. Our aim is to establish a workflow for classifying VUS in these complex genes, the first stage of which is splicing analysis. We used a combined approach consisting of five in silico splicing prediction programs and RT-PCR analysis for a set of 26 variants not previously studied at the mRNA level and six variants that had already been studied, four of which were used as positive controls as they were found to affect the splicing of these genes and the other two were used as negative controls. We identified a splicing defect in 8 of the 26 newly studied variants and ruled out splicing alteration in the remaining 18 variants. The results for the four positive and the two negative control variants were consistent with results presented in the literature. Our results strongly suggest that the combination of RNA analysis and in silico programs is an important step towards the classification of VUS. The results revealed a very high correlation between experimental data and in silico programs when using tools for predicting acceptor/donor sites but a lower correlation in the case of tools for identifying ESE elements.


BMC Cancer | 2012

Analysis of SLX4/FANCP in non-BRCA1/2-mutated breast cancer families

Juana Fernández-Rodríguez; Francisco Quiles; Ignacio Blanco; Alex Teulé; Lídia Feliubadaló; Jesús del Valle; Mónica Salinas; Angel Izquierdo; Esther Darder; Detlev Schindler; Gabriel Capellá; Joan Brunet; Conxi Lázaro; Miguel Angel Pujana

BackgroundGenes that, when mutated, cause Fanconi anemia or greatly increase breast cancer risk encode for proteins that converge on a homology-directed DNA damage repair process. Mutations in the SLX4 gene, which encodes for a scaffold protein involved in the repair of interstrand cross-links, have recently been identified in unclassified Fanconi anemia patients. A mutation analysis of SLX4 in German or Byelorussian familial cases of breast cancer without detected mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 has been completed, with globally negative results.MethodsThe genomic region of SLX4, comprising all exons and exon-intron boundaries, was sequenced in 94 Spanish familial breast cancer cases that match a criterion indicating the potential presence of a highly-penetrant germline mutation, following exclusion of BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.ResultsThis mutational analysis revealed extensive genetic variation of SLX4, with 21 novel single nucleotide variants; however, none could be linked to a clear alteration of the protein function. Nonetheless, genotyping 10 variants (nine novel, all missense amino acid changes) in a set of controls (138 women and 146 men) did not detect seven of them.ConclusionsOverall, while the results of this study do not identify clearly pathogenic mutations of SLX4 contributing to breast cancer risk, further genetic analysis, combined with functional assays of the identified rare variants, may be warranted to conclusively assess the potential link with the disease.


Clinical Genetics | 2010

Founder effect of a pathogenic MSH2 mutation identified in Spanish families with Lynch syndrome

M Menéndez; Sergi Castellví-Bel; Marta Pineda; R De Cid; Jenifer Muñoz; Sonia González; Alex Teulé; Francesc Balaguer; T. Ramón y Cajal; Josep M. Reñé; Ignacio Blanco; A. Castells; Gabriel Capellá

Menéndez M, Castellví‐Bel S, Pineda M, de Cid R, Muñoz J, González S, TeuléÀ, Balaguer F, Ramón y Cajal T, Maria Reñé J, Blanco I, Castells A, Capellà G. Founder effect of a pathogenic MSH2 mutation identified in Spanish families with Lynch syndrome.


British Journal of Cancer | 2011

Evaluation of the XRCC1 gene as a phenotypic modifier in BRCA1/2 mutation carriers. Results from the consortium of investigators of modifiers of BRCA1/BRCA2

Ana Osorio; Roger L. Milne; R. Alonso; Guillermo Pita; P. Peterlongo; Alex Teulé; Katherine L. Nathanson; Susan M. Domchek; Timothy R. Rebbeck; Adriana Lasa; Irene Konstantopoulou; Frans B. L. Hogervorst; Senno Verhoef; M.F. van Dooren; Agnes Jager; Margreet G. E. M. Ausems; Cora M. Aalfs; C.J. van Asperen; Maaike P.G. Vreeswijk; Quinten Waisfisz; C.E.P. van Roozendaal; M.J.L. Ligtenberg; Douglas F. Easton; Susan Peock; Margaret Cook; Clare Oliver; Debra Frost; B. Curzon; D G R Evans; Fiona Lalloo

Background:Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes involved in DNA repair are good candidates to be tested as phenotypic modifiers for carriers of mutations in the high-risk susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2. The base excision repair (BER) pathway could be particularly interesting given the relation of synthetic lethality that exists between one of the components of the pathway, PARP1, and both BRCA1 and BRCA2. In this study, we have evaluated the XRCC1 gene that participates in the BER pathway, as phenotypic modifier of BRCA1 and BRCA2.Methods:Three common SNPs in the gene, c.-77C>T (rs3213245) p.Arg280His (rs25489) and p.Gln399Arg (rs25487) were analysed in a series of 701 BRCA1 and 576 BRCA2 mutation carriers.Results:An association was observed between p.Arg280His-rs25489 and breast cancer risk for BRCA2 mutation carriers, with rare homozygotes at increased risk relative to common homozygotes (hazard ratio: 22.3, 95% confidence interval: 14.3–34, P<0.001). This association was further tested in a second series of 4480 BRCA1 and 3016 BRCA2 mutation carriers from the Consortium of Investigators of Modifiers of BRCA1 and BRCA2.Conclusions and inteNo evidence of association was found when the larger series was analysed which lead us to conclude that none of the three SNPs are significant modifiers of breast cancer risk for mutation carriers.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Benchmarking of Whole Exome Sequencing and Ad Hoc Designed Panels for Genetic Testing of Hereditary Cancer

Lídia Feliubadaló; Raul Tonda; Mireia Gausachs; Jean-Rémi Trotta; Elisabeth Castellanos; Adriana Lopez-Doriga; Alex Teulé; Eva Tornero; Jesús del Valle; Bernat Gel; Marta Gut; Marta Pineda; Sara González; Mireia Menéndez; Matilde Navarro; Gabriel Capellá; Ivo Gut; Eduard Serra; Joan Brunet; Sergi Beltran; Conxi Lázaro

Next generation sequencing panels have been developed for hereditary cancer, although there is some debate about their cost-effectiveness compared to exome sequencing. The performance of two panels is compared to exome sequencing. Twenty-four patients were selected: ten with identified mutations (control set) and fourteen suspicious of hereditary cancer but with no mutation (discovery set). TruSight Cancer (94 genes) and a custom panel (122 genes) were assessed alongside exome sequencing. Eighty-three genes were targeted by the two panels and exome sequencing. More than 99% of bases had a read depth of over 30x in the panels, whereas exome sequencing covered 94%. Variant calling with standard settings identified the 10 mutations in the control set, with the exception of MSH6 c.255dupC using TruSight Cancer. In the discovery set, 240 unique non-silent coding and canonic splice-site variants were identified in the panel genes, 7 of them putatively pathogenic (in ATM, BARD1, CHEK2, ERCC3, FANCL, FANCM, MSH2). The three approaches identified a similar number of variants in the shared genes. Exomes were more expensive than panels but provided additional data. In terms of cost and depth, panels are a suitable option for genetic diagnostics, although exomes also identify variants in non-targeted genes.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2011

Germline ATM mutational analysis in BRCA1/BRCA2 negative hereditary breast cancer families by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry

Begoña Graña; L. Fachal; Esther Darder; Judith Balmaña; T. Ramón y Cajal; Ignacio Blanco; Asunción Torres; Conxi Lázaro; Orland Diez; Carmen Alonso; M. T. Santamarina; Angela Velasco; Alex Teulé; Adriana Lasa; Ana Blanco; Angel Izquierdo; Josep M. Borràs; Sara Gutiérrez-Enríquez; Ana Vega; Joan Brunet

Biallelic inactivation of ATM gene causes the rare autosomal recessive disorder Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T). Female relatives of A-T patients have a two-fold higher risk of developing breast cancer (BC) compared with the general population. ATM mutation carrier identification is laborious and expensive, therefore, a more rapid and directed strategy for ATM mutation profiling is needed. We designed a case–control study to determine the prevalence of 32 known ATM mutations causing A-T in Spanish population in 323 BRCA1/BRCA2 negative hereditary breast cancer (HBC) cases and 625 matched Spanish controls. For the detection of the 32 ATM mutations we used the matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry technique. We identified one patient carrier of the c.8264_8268delATAAG ATM mutation. This mutation was not found in the 625 controls. These results suggest a low frequency of these 32 A-T causing mutations in the HBC cases in our population. Further case–control studies analyzing the entire coding and flanking sequences of the ATM gene are warranted in Spanish BC patients to know its implication in BC predisposition.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Identification of a founder BRCA1 mutation in the Moroccan population

Francisco Quiles; Alex Teulé; N. Martinussen Tandstad; Lídia Feliubadaló; Eva Tornero; J. del Valle; Mireia Menéndez; Mónica Salinas; V. Wethe Rognlien; Angela Velasco; Angel Izquierdo; Gabriel Capellá; Joan Brunet; Conxi Lázaro

Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequent cancer among women in Morocco. However, the role of the most prevalent BC‐predisposing genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2, has been largely unexplored. To help define the role of BRCA1 in BC in Morocco, we characterized the first potential BRCA1 founder mutation in this population. Genetic testing of BRCA1 and BRCA2 in BC high‐risk families identified mutation BRCA1 c.5309G>T, p.(Gly1770Val) or G1770V in five independent families from Morocco, suggesting a founder effect. To confirm this hypothesis, haplotype construction was performed using seven intragenic and flanking BRCA1 microsatellite markers. Clinical data were also compiled. Clinical data from carriers of mutation G1770V correspond to data from carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic mutations. Microsatellite analysis showed a common haplotype for the five families in a region comprising 1.54 Mb, confirming G1770V as the first specific founder BRCA1 mutation in the Moroccan population. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of BC genetics in the Moroccan population. Nevertheless, comprehensive studies of mutation G1770V in large series of BC patients from Morocco are needed to assess the real prevalence of this mutation and to improve genetic testing and risk assessment in this population.

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Daniel Castellano

Complutense University of Madrid

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Adriana Lasa

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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