Locations:
Search IconSearch
March 26, 2021/Cancer/Genomics

Cleveland Clinic Designated PTEN Clinical Center of Excellence

Clinicians and researchers with unique expertise

PTEN flip-Lerner

The PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Foundation has designated Cleveland Clinic as one of only three PTEN Clinical Centers of Excellence (CCOE) in the United States. Cleveland Clinic’s PTEN Multidisciplinary Clinic provides clinical services and support for children and adults with a confirmed or possible diagnosis of PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS) and other disorders within the PHTS spectrum, including Cowden syndrome (CS) and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome.

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

PHTS refers to a group of genetic disorders defined by germline mutations of the tumor suppressor gene PTEN. Individuals with PHTS are at increased risk for certain cancers, cognitive and behavioral deficits, benign growths and tumors (i.e., hamartomas) and macrocephaly as well as autoimmune diseases (e.g., Hashimoto thyroiditis and eosinophilic esophagitis) and other signs of immune dysregulation, including recurrent upper respiratory infections and lymphopenia. However, development of these outcomes is highly variable and difficult to predict.

“Cleveland Clinic’s designation as a PTEN Clinical Center of Excellence recognizes our longstanding efforts to discover and characterize the spectrum of PTEN-related issues, and signals to patients and referring physicians that we provide outstanding, evidence-based PHTS multidisciplinary care,” says Charis Eng, MD, PhD, the inaugural Chair of Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute’s Genomic Medicine Institute and inaugural Director of the Center for Personalized Genetic Healthcare, which includes the PTEN Multidisciplinary Clinic. Dr. Eng was the first to link PTEN to CS and subsequently to ASD.

The PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome Foundation requires a CCOE site to have on staff at least one genetic counselor, surgical breast expert, endocrinologist, endocrine surgeon, dermatologist, gastroenterologist, gynecologist, urologist and neurologist. The PTEN Multidisciplinary Clinic also houses a psychologist with expertise in hereditary syndromes, a vascular surgeon, a social worker, a medical breast expert and a patient care coordinator. The clinic sees approximately 100 patients per year. Patients can also benefit from provider collaboration with the Sanford R. Weiss, MD, Center for Hereditary Colorectal Neoplasia at Cleveland Clinic’s Digestive Disease & Surgery Institute.

Advertisement

Recent advances in PHTS

An ongoing focus of Dr. Eng’s lab in the Genomic Medicine Institute is to utilize multidisciplinary approaches — genomic modifiers, immune, microbiome, interrogation of cell fate and cellular phenotype, mouse models, etc. — to dissect the mechanism of PTEN alterations and how and why they can predispose to seemingly disparate clinical signs, such as cancer and autism, and to identify novel targets for therapy and prevention.

The global metapaths of the ASD-associated mutant PTEN phenotype (top) and cancer-associated mutant PTEN phenotype (bottom).

Advances in the study of PHTS include Dr. Eng and team’s 2020 study suggesting that copy number variations may act as genomic modifiers that influence the risk of ASD and/or developmental delay versus cancer risk in individuals with PTEN mutations.

Her team also recently uncovered a potential link between autoimmunity in patients with PHTS and the gut microbiome. Their pilot clinical study suggests that the gut microbiome, regulated in part by its interaction with key immune system molecules, may contribute to the development of autoimmune diseases and immune dysregulation in PHTS patients.

“We are on a grand mission to identify targets for prevention and early treatment for PHTS,” says Dr. Eng. “Knowledge is power, and knowledge of factors that determine ‘who will get what’ is important to guide proactive, preventative actions rather than reactive treatment of full-blown disease.”

Recent opportunities and patient referrals

Clinicians and researchers from Cleveland Clinic and other institutions across the world recently gathered via livestream at the Genomic Medicine Institute and Center for Personalized Genetic Healthcare’s 4th Annual International PTEN Symposium: From Patient-Centered Research to Clinical Care.

Advertisement

“The symposium was a unique opportunity to learn the latest on advances in the diagnosis, management and treatment of patients with PHTS,” says Dr. Eng. “We were honored to feature esteemed colleagues from national and international guest institutions, as well as many of the people who make Cleveland Clinic a Clinical Center of Excellence.”

To refer a patient to the PTEN Multidisciplinary Clinic, call 216-444-4044 or visit the Center for Personalized Genetic Healthcare’s website.

Advertisement

Related Articles

Doctors working on MGUS screening study
March 18, 2024/Cancer/Research
Pilot Study Aims for Early Identification of Multiple Myeloma Precursor Among Black Patients

First-of-its-kind research investigates the viability of standard screening to reduce the burden of late-stage cancer diagnoses

Hematologist at Cleveland Clinic
March 14, 2024/Cancer/Blood Cancers
Advances in Mantle Cell Lymphoma Treatment (Podcast)

Global R&D efforts expanding first-line and relapse therapy options for patients

Physician with patient
March 6, 2024/Cancer/Research
Targeting Uncontrolled Erythrocytosis in Polycythemia Vera with Rusfertide

Study demonstrates ability to reduce patients’ reliance on phlebotomies to stabilize hematocrit levels

Dr. Jagadeesh at Cleveland Clinic
February 28, 2024/Cancer/Blood Cancers
Treating Patient with Systemic T-Cell Lymphoma and Graft-Versus-Host Disease

A case study on the value of access to novel therapies through clinical trials

Doctor measuring patient's waist size
February 26, 2024/Cancer/Research
Impact of Obesity on GVHD & Transplant Outcomes in Hematologic Malignancies

Findings highlight an association between obesity and an increased incidence of moderate-severe disease

Physician with patient
February 21, 2024/Cancer/Research
Strategies for Improving Clinical Trial Equity

Cleveland Clinic Cancer Institute takes multi-faceted approach to increasing clinical trial access 23456

How antibody drug conjugates work
February 13, 2024/Cancer/Research
Real-World Use of Trastuzumab Deruxtecan

Key learnings from DESTINY trials

CQD-4445459-rotz-650×450
February 7, 2024/Cancer
Advances in Bone Marrow Transplant Have Improved Outcomes in Fanconi Anemia

Overall survival in patients treated since 2008 is nearly 20% higher than in earlier patients

Ad