Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Breast Cancer Research | Abstract | Risk of breast cancer in Lynch ...

Open Access Research article

Aung Ko Win, Noralane M Lindor and Mark A Jenkins

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Breast Cancer Research 2013, 15:R27?doi:10.1186/bcr3405

Published: 19 March 2013

Abstract (provisional)

Introduction

Lynch syndrome is an autosomal dominantly inherited disorder of cancer susceptibility caused by germline mutations in the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes. Mutation carriers have a substantial burden of increased risks of cancers of the colon, rectum, endometrium and several other organs which generally occur at younger ages than for the general population. The issue of whether breast cancer risk is increased for MMR gene mutation carriers has been debated with evidence for and against this association.

Methods

Using the PUBMED, we identified all relevant studies of breast cancer associated with Lynch syndrome that were published by December 15, 2012. In the review, we included: (i) molecular studies that reported microsatellite instability and/or immunohistochemistry in breast cancer tumors of MMR gene mutation carriers; and (ii) risk studies that investigated risk of breast cancer for confirmed MMR gene mutation carriers or families or clinically and/or pathologically defined Lynch syndrome families.

Results

We identified 15 molecular studies and, when combined, observed 62 of 122 (51%; 95% confidence interval, CI 42-60%) breast cancers in MMR gene mutation carriers were MMR-deficient. Of the 21 risk studies identified, 13 did not observe statistical evidence for an association of breast cancer risk with Lynch syndrome while 8 studies found an increased risk of breast cancer ranging from 2 to 18-fold compared with the general population (or non-carriers). There is only one prospective study demonstrating an elevated risk of breast cancer for MMR gene mutation carriers compared with the general population (standardized incidence ratio 3.95; 95% CI 1.59-8.13).

Conclusions

Since breast cancer is relatively common disease in the general population, more precise estimate of risk and gene-specific risks will need to utilize large prospective cohort studies with a long follow-up. While current data is inconclusive at a population level, individual tumor testing results suggest that MMR deficiency is involved with breast cancers in some individuals with Lynch syndrome.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

Source: http://breast-cancer-research.com/content/15/2/R27

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