Inherited predisposition to breast cancer among African American women

Jane Churpek(University of Chicago), Tom Walsh(University of Washington Medical Center), Yonglan Zheng(University of Chicago), Zakiya Moton(University of Chicago), Anne Thornton(University of Washington Medical Center), Ming K. Lee(University of Washington Medical Center), Silvia Casadei(University of Washington Medical Center), Amanda C. Watts(University of Washington Medical Center), Barbara Neistadt(University of Chicago), Matthew M. Churpek(University of Chicago), Dezheng Huo(University of Chicago), Cecilia Zvosec(University of Chicago), Fang Liu(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Qun Niu(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Rafael Márquez(University of Chicago), Jing Zhang(University of Chicago), James D. Fackenthal(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Mary‐Claire King(University of Washington Medical Center), Olufunmilayo I. Olopade(Cancer Genetics (United States))
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
November 27, 2014
Cited by 150Open Access
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Abstract

African Americans have a disproportionate burden of aggressive young-onset breast cancer. Genomic testing for inherited predisposition to breast cancer is increasingly common in clinical practice, but comprehensive mutation profiles remain unknown for most minority populations. We evaluated 289 patients who self-identified as African American with primary invasive breast cancer and with personal or family cancer history or tumor characteristics associated with high genetic risk for all classes of germline mutations in known breast cancer susceptibility genes using a validated targeted capture and multiplex sequencing approach. Sixty-eight damaging germline mutations were identified in 65 (22 %, 95 % CI 18-28 %) of the 289 subjects. Proportions of patients with unequivocally damaging mutations in a breast cancer gene were 26 % (47/180; 95 % confident interval [CI] 20-33 %) of those with breast cancer diagnosis before age 45; 25 % (26/103; 95 % CI 17-35 %) of those with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC); 29 % (45/156; 95 % CI 22-37 %) of those with a first or second degree relative with breast cancer before age 60 or with ovarian cancer; and 57 % (4/7; 95 % CI 18-90 %) of those with both breast and ovarian cancer. Of patients with mutations, 80 % (52/65) carried mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and 20 % (13/65) carried mutations in PALB2, CHEK2, BARD1, ATM, PTEN, or TP53. The mutational allelic spectrum was highly heterogeneous, with 57 different mutations in 65 patients. Of patients meeting selection criteria other than family history (i.e., with young age at diagnosis or TNBC), 48 % (64/133) had very limited information about the history of cancer in previous generations of their families. Mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 or another breast cancer gene occur in one in four African American breast cancer patients with early onset disease, family history of breast or ovarian cancer, or TNBC. Each of these criteria defines patients who would benefit from genomic testing and novel therapies targeting DNA repair pathways.


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