World's Largest
Population Study on BRCA 1 and BRCA 2
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
The largest population study ever done to assess the risk of cancer in families that fulfill the criteria for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation testing has confirmed that breast and ovarian cancers are the major concerns for geneticists and doctors counseling families. It has also verified that families eligible for BRCA1/2 mutation testing are at increased risk of pancreatic, prostate and stomach cancers.
One important conclusion of the study was that, in families with at least one woman with breast cancer and another woman with ovarian cancer, most ovarian cancers are not attributable to BRCA1/2 mutations. Other, as yet unknown, non-BRCA1/2 related factors are likely to increase the risk of ovarian cancer in those families.
The study, published in the journal Annals of Oncology, utilized the 2002 update of the Swedish Family-Cancer Database,
which contains everyone born in
The researchers – Dr. Justo Lorenzo Bermejo and Professor Kari Hemminki – compared the cancer incidence in families eligible for BRCA1/2 mutation testing with the incidence in the general Swedish population. They used literature data to estimate the proportion of familial cancers unrelated to BRCA1/2 mutations.
"This study has enabled us to confirm the association of these mutations with ovarian, pancreatic, prostate and stomach cancers in addition to breast cancer, but it has also shown that the clustering of early pancreatic cancer in families where there have been two breast cancers under age 50, the aggregation of ovarian cancer in families with breast and ovarian cancers and the increased incidence of early onset prostate cancer in families with male breast cancer seem to be due to other effects unrelated to BRCA1/2."
"We need to identify the additional factors that account for
this residual family aggregation," said
Hemminki, Head of the Department of Molecular
Genetic Epidemiology at the
Key conclusions from
the study:
·
Breast and ovarian cancers are the major concern in clinical
counseling of families that
fulfil
the clinical criteria for BRCA1/2 mutation testing;
·
In families with bilateral breast cancer or two breast cancers
before age 50, there is concern about early onset pancreatic cancer;
·
Prostate cancers are also in excess in families with bilateral
breast cancer or two breast cancers before age 50, although the risk is only
moderate;
·
Most cases of ovarian cancer in families with male breast
cancer, and in families with at least two breast cancer diagnosed before age
50, are probably attributable to BRCA1/2 mutations;
· Other, non BRCA1/2 related effects are probably involved in the aggregation of ovarian cancer in families with breast and ovarian cancers.
Hemminki
and
SOURCES:
Annals of Oncology,
European Society for Medical Oncology