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Association of low-penetrance alleles with male breast cancer risk and clinicopathological characteristics: results from a multicenter study in Italy.

Authors :
Ottini L
Silvestri V
Saieva C
Rizzolo P
Zanna I
Falchetti M
Masala G
Navazio AS
Graziano V
Bianchi S
Manoukian S
Barile M
Peterlongo P
D'Amico C
Varesco L
Tommasi S
Russo A
Giannini G
Cortesi L
Viel A
Montagna M
Radice P
Palli D
Source :
Breast cancer research and treatment [Breast Cancer Res Treat] 2013 Apr; Vol. 138 (3), pp. 861-8. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Mar 07.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

It is well-known that male breast cancer (MBC) susceptibility is mainly due to high-penetrance BRCA1/2 mutations. Here, we investigated whether common low-penetrance breast cancer (BC) susceptibility alleles may influence MBC risk in Italian population and whether variant alleles may be associated with specific clinicopathological features of MBCs. In the frame of the Italian Multicenter Study on MBC, we genotyped 413 MBCs and 745 age-matched male controls at 9 SNPs annotating known BC susceptibility loci. By multivariate logistic regression models, we found a significant increased MBC risk for 3 SNPs, in particular, with codominant models, for rs2046210/ESR1 (OR = 1.71; 95 % CI: 1.43-2.05; p = 0.0001), rs3803662/TOX3 (OR = 1.59; 95 % CI: 1.32-1.92; p = 0.0001), and rs2981582/FGFR2 (OR = 1.26; 95 % CI: 1.05-1.50; p = 0.013). Furthermore, we showed that the prevalence of the risk genotypes of ESR1 tended to be higher in ER- tumors (p = 0.062). In a case-case multivariate analysis, a statistically significant association between ESR1 and ER- tumors was found (OR = 1.88; 95 % CI: 1.03-3.49; p = 0.039). Overall, our data, based on a large and well-characterized MBC series, support the hypothesis that common low-penetrance BC susceptibility alleles play a role in MBC susceptibility and, interestingly, indicate that ESR1 is associated with a distinct tumor subtype defined by ER-negative status.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1573-7217
Volume :
138
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Breast cancer research and treatment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23468243
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10549-013-2459-4