Pathology of Breast and Ovarian Cancers among <i>BRCA1</i> and <i>BRCA2</i> Mutation Carriers: Results from the Consortium of Investigators of Modifiers of <i>BRCA1</i> / <i>2</i> (CIMBA)

Nasim Mavaddat(Mount Sinai Hospital), Daniel Barrowdale(Mount Sinai Hospital), Irene L. Andrulis(Mount Sinai Hospital), Susan M. Domchek(Mount Sinai Hospital), Diana Eccles(Mount Sinai Hospital), Heli Nevanlinna(Mount Sinai Hospital), Susan J. Ramus(Mount Sinai Hospital), Amanda B. Spurdle(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mark E. Robson(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mark E. Sherman(Mount Sinai Hospital), Anna Marie Mulligan(Mount Sinai Hospital), Fergus J. Couch(Mount Sinai Hospital), Christoph Engel(Mount Sinai Hospital), Lesley McGuffog(Mount Sinai Hospital), Sue Healey(Mount Sinai Hospital), Olga M. Sinilnikova(Mount Sinai Hospital), Melissa C. Southey(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mary Beth Terry(Mount Sinai Hospital), David E. Goldgar(Mount Sinai Hospital), Frances P. O’Malley(Mount Sinai Hospital), Esther M. John(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ramūnas Janavičius(Mount Sinai Hospital), Laima Tihomirova(Mount Sinai Hospital), Thomas van Overeem Hansen(Mount Sinai Hospital), Finn C. Nielsen(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ana Osório(Mount Sinai Hospital), Alexandra Stavropoulou(Heidelberg University), Javier Benı́tez(Universidad Complutense de Madrid), Siranoush Manoukian(Mount Sinai Hospital), Bernard Peissel(Mount Sinai Hospital), Monica Barile(Mount Sinai Hospital), Sara Volorio(Mount Sinai Hospital), Barbara Pasini(Mount Sinai Hospital), Riccardo Dolcetti(Mount Sinai Hospital), Anna Laura Putignano(Mount Sinai Hospital), Laura Ottini(Mount Sinai Hospital), Paolo Radice(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ute Hamann(Mount Sinai Hospital), Muhammad Usman Rashid(Mount Sinai Hospital), Frans B.L. Hogervorst(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mieke Kriege(Mount Sinai Hospital), Rob B. van der Luijt(Mount Sinai Hospital), Susan Peock(Mount Sinai Hospital), Debra Frost(Mount Sinai Hospital), D. Gareth Evans(Mount Sinai Hospital), Carole Brewer(Mount Sinai Hospital), Lisa Walker(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mark T. Rogers(Mount Sinai Hospital), Lucy Side(Mount Sinai Hospital), Catherine Houghton(Mount Sinai Hospital), JoEllen Weaver(Mount Sinai Hospital), Andrew K. Godwin(Mount Sinai Hospital), Rita K. Schmutzler(Mount Sinai Hospital), Barbara Wappenschmidt(Mount Sinai Hospital), Alfons Meindl(Mount Sinai Hospital), Karin Kast(Mount Sinai Hospital), Norbert Arnold(Mount Sinai Hospital), Dieter Niederacher(Mount Sinai Hospital), Christian Sutter(Mount Sinai Hospital), Helmut Deißler(Mount Sinai Hospital), Doroteha Gadzicki(Mount Sinai Hospital), Sabine Preisler‐Adams(Mount Sinai Hospital), Raymonda Varon-Mateeva(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ines Schönbuchner(Mount Sinai Hospital), Heidrun Gevensleben(Mount Sinai Hospital), Dominique Stoppa‐Lyonnet(Mount Sinai Hospital), Muriel Belotti(Mount Sinai Hospital), Laure Barjhoux(Mount Sinai Hospital), Claudine Isaacs(Mount Sinai Hospital), Beth N. Peshkin(Mount Sinai Hospital), Trinidad Caldés(Universidad Complutense de Madrid), Miguel de la Hoya(Mount Sinai Hospital), Carmen Cañadas(Mount Sinai Hospital), Tuomas Heikkinen(Mount Sinai Hospital), Päivi Heikkilä(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kristiina Aittomäki(Mount Sinai Hospital), Ignacio Blanco(Mount Sinai Hospital), Conxi Lázaro(Mount Sinai Hospital), Joan Brunet(Mount Sinai Hospital), Bjarni A. Agnarsson(Mount Sinai Hospital), Aðalgeir Arason(Mount Sinai Hospital), Rósa B. Barkardóttir(Mount Sinai Hospital), Martine Dumont(Mount Sinai Hospital), Jacques Simard(Mount Sinai Hospital), Marco Montagna(American Cancer Society), Simona Agata(American Cancer Society), Emma D’Andrea(Mount Sinai Hospital), Max Yan(Mount Sinai Hospital), Stephen B. Fox(Mount Sinai Hospital), Timothy R. Rebbeck(Mount Sinai Hospital), Wendy S. Rubinstein(Mount Sinai Hospital), Nadine Tung(Mount Sinai Hospital), Judy E. Garber(Mount Sinai Hospital), Xianshu Wang(Mount Sinai Hospital), Zachary Fredericksen(Mount Sinai Hospital), V. Shane Pankratz(Mount Sinai Hospital), Noralane M. Lindor(Mount Sinai Hospital), Csilla I. Szabo(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kenneth Offit(Mount Sinai Hospital), Rita A. Sakr(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mia M. Gaudet(Mount Sinai Hospital), Christian F. Singer(Mount Sinai Hospital), Muy‐Kheng M. Tea(Mount Sinai Hospital), Christine Rappaport(Mount Sinai Hospital), Phuong L. Mai(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mark H. Greene(Mount Sinai Hospital), Anna P. Sokolenko(Mount Sinai Hospital), Evgeny Imyanitov(Mount Sinai Hospital), Amanda E. Toland(Mount Sinai Hospital), Leigha Senter(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kevin Sweet(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mads Thomassen(Mount Sinai Hospital), Anne‐Marie Gerdes(Mount Sinai Hospital), Torben A. Kruse(Mount Sinai Hospital), Maria A. Caligo(Mount Sinai Hospital), Paolo Aretini(Mount Sinai Hospital), Johanna Rantala(Mount Sinai Hospital), Anna von Wachenfeld(Mount Sinai Hospital), Karin Henriksson(Mount Sinai Hospital), Linda Steele(Mount Sinai Hospital), Susan L. Neuhausen(Mount Sinai Hospital), Robert L. Nussbaum(Mount Sinai Hospital), Mary Beattie(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kunle Odunsi(Mount Sinai Hospital), Lara Sucheston(Mount Sinai Hospital), Simon A. Gayther(Mount Sinai Hospital), Kate Nathanson(Mount Sinai Hospital), Jenny Gross(Mount Sinai Hospital), Christine Walsh(Mount Sinai Hospital), Beth Y. Karlan(Mount Sinai Hospital), Georgia Chenevix‐Trench(Mount Sinai Hospital), Douglas F. Easton(Mount Sinai Hospital), Antonis C. Antoniou(Mount Sinai Hospital)
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention
January 1, 2012
Cited by 665Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previously, small studies have found that BRCA1 and BRCA2 breast tumors differ in their pathology. Analysis of larger datasets of mutation carriers should allow further tumor characterization. METHODS: We used data from 4,325 BRCA1 and 2,568 BRCA2 mutation carriers to analyze the pathology of invasive breast, ovarian, and contralateral breast cancers. RESULTS: There was strong evidence that the proportion of estrogen receptor (ER)-negative breast tumors decreased with age at diagnosis among BRCA1 (P-trend = 1.2 × 10(-5)), but increased with age at diagnosis among BRCA2, carriers (P-trend = 6.8 × 10(-6)). The proportion of triple-negative tumors decreased with age at diagnosis in BRCA1 carriers but increased with age at diagnosis of BRCA2 carriers. In both BRCA1 and BRCA2 carriers, ER-negative tumors were of higher histologic grade than ER-positive tumors (grade 3 vs. grade 1; P = 1.2 × 10(-13) for BRCA1 and P = 0.001 for BRCA2). ER and progesterone receptor (PR) expression were independently associated with mutation carrier status [ER-positive odds ratio (OR) for BRCA2 = 9.4, 95% CI: 7.0-12.6 and PR-positive OR = 1.7, 95% CI: 1.3-2.3, under joint analysis]. Lobular tumors were more likely to be BRCA2-related (OR for BRCA2 = 3.3, 95% CI: 2.4-4.4; P = 4.4 × 10(-14)), and medullary tumors BRCA1-related (OR for BRCA2 = 0.25, 95% CI: 0.18-0.35; P = 2.3 × 10(-15)). ER-status of the first breast cancer was predictive of ER-status of asynchronous contralateral breast cancer (P = 0.0004 for BRCA1; P = 0.002 for BRCA2). There were no significant differences in ovarian cancer morphology between BRCA1 and BRCA2 carriers (serous: 67%; mucinous: 1%; endometrioid: 12%; clear-cell: 2%). CONCLUSIONS/IMPACT: Pathologic characteristics of BRCA1 and BRCA2 tumors may be useful for improving risk-prediction algorithms and informing clinical strategies for screening and prophylaxis.


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