Lorenzo Bermejo J, Hemminki K
Division of Molecular Genetic Epidemiology, German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany.
Ann Oncol. 2004 Dec;15(12):1834-41. doi: 10.1093/annonc/mdh474.
Population-based data on the risk of cancer in families eligible for BRCA1/2 mutation testing may help to reach a consensus about the association of BRCA1/2 mutations with cancer at sites other than the breast and may reveal new, non-BRCA1/2 related components of the familial clustering of cancer in those families.
The families of the Swedish Family-Cancer Database with at least three generations (n = 944,723) were classified according to the criteria proposed by the German Consortium for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer. The cancer incidences in the classified families were compared with the incidences in the general population. The percentages of individuals with cancer in families eligible for BRCA1/2 mutation testing were compared with data in the literature to estimate the proportion of malignancies related to BRCA1/2 mutations.
Families with two breast cancers before the age of 50 years showed increased risk of early onset pancreatic, prostate and ovarian cancers; families with ovarian and breast cancers presented increased incidences for ovarian and ocular cancers; families with two breast cancers, at least one of them under the age of 50 years, showed increased risks of prostate and primary liver cancers. Stomach cancer before age 70 years was twice as frequent in families with breast and ovarian cancers as in the general population. BRCA1/2 mutations probably explain most of the aggregation of ovarian cancer in families with male breast cancer, and in families with at least two breast cancers diagnosed before age 50 years.
The association of BRCA1/2 mutations with ovarian, pancreatic, prostate and stomach cancers was confirmed at a population level. However, the clustering of early pancreatic cancer in families with two breast cancers under age 50 years, 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 mutations.
关于符合BRCA1/2突变检测条件的家族中癌症风险的基于人群的数据,可能有助于就BRCA1/2突变与乳腺以外部位癌症的关联达成共识,并可能揭示这些家族中癌症家族聚集性的新的、与BRCA1/2无关的组成部分。
瑞典家族癌症数据库中至少有三代人的家族(n = 944,723)根据德国遗传性乳腺癌和卵巢癌联盟提出的标准进行分类。将分类后的家族中的癌症发病率与一般人群的发病率进行比较。将符合BRCA1/2突变检测条件的家族中患癌个体的百分比与文献中的数据进行比较,以估计与BRCA1/2突变相关的恶性肿瘤比例。
有两名50岁前患乳腺癌的家族,其患早期胰腺癌、前列腺癌和卵巢癌的风险增加;有卵巢癌和乳腺癌的家族,其患卵巢癌和眼癌的发病率增加;有两名乳腺癌患者(其中至少一名在50岁以下)的家族,其患前列腺癌和原发性肝癌的风险增加。70岁前患胃癌的情况在有乳腺癌和卵巢癌的家族中是一般人群的两倍。BRCA1/2突变可能解释了男性乳腺癌家族以及至少有两名50岁前被诊断为乳腺癌的家族中卵巢癌聚集的大部分原因。
在人群水平上证实了BRCA1/2突变与卵巢癌、胰腺癌、前列腺癌和胃癌之间的关联。然而,50岁以下有两名乳腺癌患者的家族中早期胰腺癌的聚集、有乳腺癌和卵巢癌的家族中卵巢癌的聚集,以及男性乳腺癌家族中早期前列腺癌发病率的增加,似乎是由与BRCA1/2突变无关的其他因素导致的。