BRCA1 mutations in women attending clinics that evaluate the risk of breast cancer

被引:522
|
作者
Couch, FJ
DeShano, ML
Blackwood, MA
Calzone, K
Stopfer, J
Campeau, L
Ganguly, A
Rebbeck, T
Weber, BL
Jablon, L
Cobleigh, MA
Hoskins, K
Garber, JE
机构
[1] UNIV PENN,DEPT MED,STELLAR CHANCE LABS 1009,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
[2] UNIV PENN,DEPT GENET,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
[3] UNIV PENN,DEPT BIOSTAT & EPIDEMIOL,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
[4] ALBERT EINSTEIN MED CTR,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19141
[5] RUSH PRESBYTERIAN ST LUKES MED CTR,CHICAGO,IL 60612
[6] ROCKFORD MEM HOSP,ROCKFORD,IL
[7] DANA FARBER CANC INST,BOSTON,MA 02115
来源
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE | 1997年 / 336卷 / 20期
关键词
D O I
10.1056/NEJM199705153362002
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background To define the incidence of BRCA1 mutations among patients seen in clinics that evaluate the risk of breast cancer, we analyzed DNA samples from women seen in this setting and constructed probability tables to provide estimates of the likelihood of finding a BRCA1 mutation in individual families. Methods Clinical information, family histories, and blood for DNA analysis were obtained from 263 women with breast cancer. Conformation-sensitive gel electrophoresis and DNA sequencing were used to identify BRCA1 mutations. Results BRCA1 mutations were identified in 16 percent of women with a family history of breast cancer. Only 7 percent of women from families with a history of breast cancer but not ovarian cancer had BRCA1 mutations. The rates were higher among women from families with a history of both breast and ovarian cancer. Among family members, an average age of less than 55 years at the diagnosis of breast cancer, the presence of ovarian cancer, the presence of breast and ovarian cancer in the same woman, and Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry were all associated with an increased risk of detecting a BRCA1 mutation. No association was found between the presence of bilateral breast cancer or the number of breast cancers in a family and the detection of a BRCA1 mutation, or between the position of the mutation in the BRCA1 gene and the presence of ovarian an cancer in a family. Conclusions Among women with breast cancer and a family history of the disease, the percentage with BRCA1 coding-region mutations is less than the 45 percent predicted by genetic-linkage analysis. These results suggest that even in a referral clinic specializing in screening women from high-risk families, the majority of tests for BRCA1 mutations will be negative and therefore uninformative. (C) 1997, Massachusetts Medical Society.
引用
收藏
页码:1409 / 1415
页数:7
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