Division of Hematology-Oncology, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Cancer. 2021 Mar 15;127(6):828-833. doi: 10.1002/cncr.33305. Epub 2020 Nov 4.
Approximately 5% to 10% of women diagnosed with breast cancer will have a pathogenic variant (PV) in a hereditary cancer susceptibility gene, and this has significant implications for the management of these patients and their relatives. Despite the benefits of genetic testing, many eligible patients with breast cancer never undergo testing because of various barriers, including complicated testing criteria such as those from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN). In 2019, the American Society of Breast Surgeons (ASBrS) proposed germline genetic testing for all patients with breast cancer to increase the identification of PV carriers. In 2020, a Mayo Clinic study highlighted the limitations of these 2 genetic testing guidelines (NCCN and ASBrS) and proposed a hybrid approach of testing all women diagnosed with breast cancer by the age of 65 years and using NCCN criteria for older patients. This commentary presents an updated analysis of the Mayo Clinic data and discusses the rationale for using the age of 60 years rather than 65 years as the cutoff for this hybrid approach. Using an age at diagnosis of ≤60 or ≤65 years for the universal testing of patients with breast cancer detected more PVs (11.9% [16 of 134] and 15.7% [21 of 134], respectively) in comparison with using the NCCN criteria. Lowering the age for universal testing from 65 to 60 years maintained the sensitivity of detecting a PV at >90% while sparing testing for an additional 10% of women. Compared with the testing of all patients, the hybrid approach would allow 31% of all women with breast cancer to forgo testing and result in fewer variants of uncertain significance identified and, therefore, would decrease the chance of harm from misinterpretation of these variants.
约 5%至 10%被诊断患有乳腺癌的女性将在遗传性癌症易感性基因中存在致病性变异 (PV),这对这些患者及其亲属的管理具有重要意义。尽管基因检测有其益处,但许多符合条件的乳腺癌患者由于各种障碍而从未接受过检测,这些障碍包括复杂的检测标准,例如美国国家综合癌症网络 (NCCN) 的标准。2019 年,美国乳腺外科学会 (ASBrS) 建议对所有乳腺癌患者进行种系基因检测,以增加 PV 携带者的识别率。2020 年,梅奥诊所的一项研究强调了这两项基因检测指南 (NCCN 和 ASBrS) 的局限性,并提出了一种混合方法,即对所有 65 岁以下诊断为乳腺癌的女性进行检测,并对年龄较大的患者使用 NCCN 标准。本评论对梅奥诊所的数据进行了更新分析,并讨论了将 60 岁而不是 65 岁作为该混合方法的截止年龄的基本原理。使用≤60 岁或≤65 岁的诊断年龄对检测到的乳腺癌患者进行普遍检测,可检测到更多的 PV (分别为 11.9%[134 例中的 16 例]和 15.7%[134 例中的 21 例]),与使用 NCCN 标准相比。将普遍检测的年龄从 65 岁降低到 60 岁,在保持检测到 PV 的敏感性>90%的同时,可避免对另外 10%的女性进行检测。与对所有患者进行检测相比,混合方法可使 31%的所有乳腺癌女性免于检测,减少识别到的不确定意义变异数量,从而降低因错误解释这些变异而造成伤害的可能性。