Breast-Cancer Risk in Families with Mutations in <i>PALB2</i>

Antonis C. Antoniou(University of Cambridge), Silvia Casadei(University of Washington Medical Center), Tuomas Heikkinen(University of Helsinki), Daniel Barrowdale(University of Cambridge), Katri Pylkäs(Oulu University Hospital), Jonathan Roberts(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Andrew Lee(University of Cambridge), Deepak Subramanian(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Kim De Leeneer(Ghent University Hospital), Florentia Fostira(National Centre of Scientific Research "Demokritos"), Eva Tomiak(Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario), Susan L. Neuhausen(Beckman Research Institute), Zhi L. Teo(The University of Melbourne), Sofia Khan(University of Helsinki), Kristiina Aittomäki(Helsinki University Hospital), Jukka S. Moilanen(Oulu University Hospital), Clare Turnbull(National Health Service), Sheila Seal(National Health Service), Arto Mannermaa(University of Eastern Finland), Anne Kallioniemi(Tampere University), Geoffrey J. Lindeman(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Saundra S. Buys(University of Utah), Irene L. Andrulis(Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute), Paolo Radice, Carlo Tondini(National Health Service), Siranoush Manoukian, Amanda E. Toland(The Ohio State University), Penelope Miron(Case Western Reserve University), Jeffrey N. Weitzel(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Susan M. Domchek(University of Pennsylvania), Bruce Poppe(Ghent University Hospital), Kathleen Claes(Ghent University Hospital), Drakoulis Yannoukakos(National Centre of Scientific Research "Demokritos"), Patrick Concannon(University of Florida), Jonine L. Bernstein(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Paul A. James(Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre), Douglas F. Easton(University of Cambridge), David E. Goldgar(University of Utah), John L. Hopper(The University of Melbourne), Nazneen Rahman(National Health Service), Paolo Peterlongo, Heli Nevanlinna(University of Helsinki), Mary‐Claire King(University of Washington Medical Center), Fergus J. Couch(Mayo Clinic), Melissa C. Southey(The University of Melbourne), Robert Winqvist(Oulu University Hospital), William D. Foulkes(McGill University Health Centre), Marc Tischkowitz(University of Cambridge)
New England Journal of Medicine
August 6, 2014
Cited by 853Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Germline loss-of-function mutations in PALB2 are known to confer a predisposition to breast cancer. However, the lifetime risk of breast cancer that is conferred by such mutations remains unknown. METHODS: We analyzed the risk of breast cancer among 362 members of 154 families who had deleterious truncating, splice, or deletion mutations in PALB2. The age-specific breast-cancer risk for mutation carriers was estimated with the use of a modified segregation-analysis approach that allowed for the effects of PALB2 genotype and residual familial aggregation. RESULTS: The risk of breast cancer for female PALB2 mutation carriers, as compared with the general population, was eight to nine times as high among those younger than 40 years of age, six to eight times as high among those 40 to 60 years of age, and five times as high among those older than 60 years of age. The estimated cumulative risk of breast cancer among female mutation carriers was 14% (95% confidence interval [CI], 9 to 20) by 50 years of age and 35% (95% CI, 26 to 46) by 70 years of age. Breast-cancer risk was also significantly influenced by birth cohort (P<0.001) and by other familial factors (P=0.04). The absolute breast-cancer risk for PALB2 female mutation carriers by 70 years of age ranged from 33% (95% CI, 25 to 44) for those with no family history of breast cancer to 58% (95% CI, 50 to 66) for those with two or more first-degree relatives with breast cancer at 50 years of age. CONCLUSIONS: Loss-of-function mutations in PALB2 are an important cause of hereditary breast cancer, with respect both to the frequency of cancer-predisposing mutations and to the risk associated with them. Our data suggest the breast-cancer risk for PALB2 mutation carriers may overlap with that for BRCA2 mutation carriers. (Funded by the European Research Council and others.).


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