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ImportanceRET germline pathogenic variants cause multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2), which is associated with medullary thyroid cancer. With increasing incidental identification of these variants in asymptomatic individuals outside family screening, these individuals' risk of medullary thyroid cancer and all-cause mortality without intervention remain unknown in this context.ObjectiveTo evaluate the risk of medullary thyroid cancer and all-cause mortality in clinically unselected individuals with incidentally identified RET variants and assess whether the risk of medullary thyroid cancer differs from those with clinically ascertained RET variants.Design, setting, and participantsThis prospective cohort study of 383 914 unrelated individuals from the clinically unselected UK population (UK Biobank, recruited in 2006-2010, with follow-up to June 2023) and 122 640 unrelated individuals from a US health system (Geisinger MyCode cohort, recruited 2004-2020, with follow-up to October 2023) compared medullary thyroid cancer risk in these cohorts with 1078 individuals who were clinically ascertained with suspicion of MEN2 from a UK routine practice.ExposuresRET germline pathogenic variants causing MEN2.Main outcomes and measuresFrequency and the spectrum of pathogenic RET variants, risk of clinically present medullary thyroid cancer, and all-cause mortality without thyroidectomy were assessed using proportions with exact binomial 95% CIs and survival analysis adjusted for age at recruitment and sex.ResultsIn the UK Biobank, 169 unrelated individuals (mean [SD] age at recruitment, 57.0 [8.1] years; 94 male [55.6%]) had a pathogenic RET variant (prevalence, 0.04% [95% CI, 0.04%-0.05%]). In the US health system-based cohort, 77 unrelated individuals (mean [SD] age at recruitment, 56.2 [17.8] years; 45 female [58.4%]) had a pathogenic RET variant (prevalence, 0.06% [95% CI, 0.05%-0.78%]). The variants were predominantly from the moderate-risk category per American Thyroid Association guidelines (168 individuals [99.4%] and 75 individuals [94.8%], respectively). The Kaplan-Meier estimated medullary thyroid cancer risk by age 75 years in variant carriers in the UK population was 2.2% (95% CI, 0.7%-6.9) and 19.3% (95% CI, 6.4%-30.2%) in US health system cohort. These risks were significantly lower compared with the clinically ascertained cohort with the matched variants (95.7% [95% CI, 82.1%-99.7%]). In the UK Biobank, most variant carriers (166 [98.2%]) did not undergo thyroidectomy, and their all-cause mortality by age 75 years was similar to noncarriers (6.1% [95% CI, 2.7%-13.8%] vs 5.7% [95% CI, 5.6%-5.8%]), with consistent findings in the US health system cohort.Conclusions and relevanceIn this cohort study, moderate-risk RET variants were most common in incidental cases. The variants were associated with a substantially lower medullary thyroid cancer risk than clinically ascertained cases. This evidence addresses a current knowledge gap, enabling more informed clinical decision-making.

Original publication

DOI

10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.17937

Type

Journal article

Journal

JAMA network open

Publication Date

06/2025

Volume

8

Addresses

Department of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, United Kingdom.

Keywords

Humans, Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine, Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 2a, Thyroid Neoplasms, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Incidental Findings, Prospective Studies, Heterozygote, Germ-Line Mutation, Adult, Aged, Middle Aged, Female, Male, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-ret, United Kingdom