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Common Breast Cancer Susceptibility Alleles and the Risk of Breast Cancer for BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Carriers: Implications for Risk Prediction

Authors :
Noguchi, Tetsuro
Caldes, Trinidad
Caligo, Maria
Viel, Alessandra
Ramus, Susan J.
Claes, Kathleen
Aalfs, Cora M.
Kaufman, Bella
Friedman, Eitan
Manoukian, Siranoush
Jernström, Helena
Milgrom, Roni
Schönbuchner, Ines
Cole, Trevor
Allavena, Anna
Isaacs, Claudine
Lazaro, Conxi
Chen, Xiaoqing
Buys, Saundra S.
Porteous, Mary E.
Hansen, Thomas V.O.
Wang, Xianshu
Hardouin, Agnès
Arnold, Norbert
Benitez, Javier
Engel, Christoph
Simard, Jacques
Cook, Jackie
Jensen, Uffe Birk
Preisler-Adams, Sabine
Rantala, Johanna
Walker, Lisa
Meindl, Alfons
Montagna, Marco
Beesley, Jonathan
Aittomäki, Kristiina
Terry, Mary B.
Vénat-Bouvet, Laurence
Faivre, Laurence
Miron, Alexander
Domchek, Susan
McGuffog, Lesley
Zikan, Michal
Godino, Javier
Neuhausen, Susan L.
Lindblom, Annika
Nathanson, Kate
Van Der Luijt, Rob B.
Meijers-Heijboer, E. J.
Hamann, Ute
Mazoyer, Sylvie
Davidson, Rosemarie
Hogervorst, Frans
Spurdle, Amanda B.
Lalloo, Fiona
Rennert, Gad
Niederacher, Dieter
Zaffaroni, Daniela
Blanco, Ignacio
Wappenschmidt, Barbara
Szabo, Csilla I.
Gadzicki, Dorothea
Dubrovsky, Maya
Peock, Susan
Dutra-Clarke, Ana
Ganz, Patricia A.
Peterlongo, Paolo
Weitzel, Jeffrey N.
Poppe, Bruce
Rodriguez, Gustavo C.
Lasset, Christine
Bonadona, Valérie
Mai, Phuong L.
Dorkins, Huw
Lubinski, Jan
Glendon, Gord
Holland, Helene
Frénay, Marc
Rebbeck, Timothy R.
Hopper, John L.
Blok, Marinus J.
Offit, Kenneth
Borg, Ake
Lejbkowicz, Flavio
Devilee, Peter
Frost, Debra
Blank, Stephanie V.
Kirchhoff, Tomas
Van Asperen, Christi J.
Agnarsson, Bjarni A.
Foretova, Lenka
Deissler, Helmut
Lindor, Noralane M.
Nevanlinna, Heli
Kriege, Mieke
Toland, Amanda Ewart
Gschwantler-Kaulich, Daphne
Rouleau, Etienne
De Pauw, Antoine
Karlan, Beth Y.
Goldgar, David
Oliver, Clare
Godwin, Andrew K.
Olopade, Olufunmilayo I.
Osorio, Ana
Easton, Douglas F.
Cohen, Shimrit
Berthet, Pascaline
Tihomirova, Laima
Platte, Radka
Lasa, Adriana
Rookus, Matti
Conroy, Don
Couch, Fergus J.
Loustalot, Catherine
Sobol, Hagay
Chenevix-Trench, Georgia
Piedmonte, Marion
Schwartz, Peter E.
Imyanitov, Evgeny
Heidemann, Simone
Barile, Monica
Casella, Cinzia
Jnson, Lars
Laitman, Yael
Healey, Sue
Schmutzler, Rita
Cruger, Dorthe
Sunde, Lone
Ding, Yuan Chun
Nogues, Catherine
Dall'Olio, Valentina
Yassin, Yosuf
Antoniou, Antonis C.
Leroux, Dominique
Sutter, Christian
Evans, D. Gareth
Huzarski, Tomasz
Daly, Mary B.
Pichert, Gabriella
Lochmann, Magdalena
Kast, Karin
Gross, Jenny
Stoppa-Lyonnet, Dominique
Andrulis, Irene L.
Melin, Beatrice
Dreyfus, Hélène
Stenmark-Askmalm, Marie
Gerdes, Anne Marie
Boggess, John F.
Paterson, Joan
Kennedy, M. John
Thomassen, Mads
Pfeiler, Georg
Basil, Jack
Devlin, Vincent
Tejada, Maria Isabel
Hoogerbrugge, Nicoline
Cook, Margaret
De La Hoya, Miguel
Pankratz, Vernon S.
Sucheston, Lara
Radice, Paolo
John, Esther M.
Singer, Christian F.
Peissel, Bernard
Lynch, Henry T.
Varon-Mateeva, Raymonda
Hodgson, Shirley
Durán, Mercedes
Greene, Mark H.
Wakeley, Katie
Sinilnikova, Olga M.
Dressler, Anne Catharina
Ozcelik, Hilmi
Morrison, Patrick J.
Jakubowska, Ania
Tomlinson, Gail
Publisher :
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill University Libraries

Abstract

The known breast cancer (BC) susceptibility polymorphisms in FGFR2, TNRC9/TOX3, MAP3K1,LSP1 and 2q35 confer increased risks of BC for BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers. We evaluated the associations of three additional SNPs, rs4973768 in SLC4A7/NEK10, rs6504950 in STXBP4/COX11 and rs10941679 at 5p12 and reanalyzed the previous associations using additional carriers in a sample of 12,525 BRCA1 and 7,409 BRCA2 carriers. Additionally, we investigated potential interactions between SNPs and assessed the implications for risk prediction. The minor alleles of rs4973768 and rs10941679 were associated with increased BC risk for BRCA2 carriers (per-allele Hazard Ratio (HR)=1.10, 95%CI:1.03-1.18, p=0.006 and HR=1.09, 95%CI:1.01-1.19, p=0.03, respectively). Neither SNP was associated with BC risk for BRCA1 carriers and rs6504950 was not associated with BC for either BRCA1 or BRCA2 carriers. Of the nine polymorphisms investigated, seven were associated with BC for BRCA2 carriers (FGFR2, TOX3, MAP3K1, LSP1, 2q35, SLC4A7, 5p12, p-values:7×10−11-0.03), but only TOX3 and 2q35 were associated with the risk for BRCA1 carriers (p=0.0049, 0.03 respectively). All risk associated polymorphisms appear to interact multiplicatively on BC risk for mutation carriers. Based on the joint genotype distribution of the seven risk associated SNPs in BRCA2 mutation carriers, the 5% of BRCA2 carriers at highest risk (i.e. between 95th and 100th percentiles) were predicted to have a probability between 80% and 96% of developing BC by age 80, compared with 42-50% for the 5% of carriers at lowest risk. Our findings indicated that these risk differences may be sufficient to influence the clinical management of mutation carriers.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6f08589611b879f064fa40504255e2fd