1 / 56

Breast Cancer Genetics and Prevention

Breast Cancer Genetics and Prevention. January 13, 2009. Case: Anna age 38. Recent core biopsy for clinical stage I ca breast Sister had ca breast age 33 BRCA testing done 2001 was normal Referred to you for pre-op consultation. Questions.

urbana
Télécharger la présentation

Breast Cancer Genetics and Prevention

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Breast Cancer Genetics and Prevention January 13, 2009

  2. Case: Anna age 38 • Recent core biopsy for clinical stage I ca breast • Sister had ca breast age 33 • BRCA testing done 2001 was normal • Referred to you for pre-op consultation

  3. Questions • Is there any rationale for referring Anna for genetic testing? • If yes, would finding a mutation: • Alter treatment of Anna’s cancer? • Local? • Systemic? • Alter her post-treatment management? 3) If neither Anna nor her sister have a BRCA mutation what is their 3rd sister’s risk of breast cancer and how should she be managed?

  4. BREAST CANCER

  5. ‘FAMILIAL’ BREAST CANCER • less striking family history • no ovarian cancer • often older onset • no BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation found • likely causes: • chance • common environmental factors • lower penetrance genes

  6. Lower Penetrance Genes • CHEK2 1100 delC • ATM carriers • BRIP1 (Nature Genetics, Oct. 2006) • PALB2(Nature Genetics Feb. 2007) • Other ‘cancer genes’? (CDKN2A, HNPCC?) • Not yet isolated: • breast density gene (s) • carcinogen metabolism genes? • estrogen receptor and metabolism genes? • CDH –1 (familial gastric cancer)

  7. HEREDITARY BREAST CANCER: Clinical Presentation • Autosomal dominant with high penetrance • Young age • Bilateral breast cancer • Epithelial ovarian cancer • Male breast cancer • (certain ethnic groups)

  8. Hereditary Breast Cancer:History • 1866 Broca: 1st description • 1970’s: Lynch: 3 breast /breast-ovary families • 1990: linkage to chromosome 17 • 1994: BRCA1 localized on chromosome 17 • 1995: BRCA2 localized on chromosome 13

  9. PREVALENCE • ~5% of all breast cancer • ~10% of all ovarian cancer • ~ 1/250 of general population

  10. ~ All Breast- Ovary Families

  11. - both highly expressed in breast, ovary, thymus and testis - both involved in repair of double-stranded DNA breaks- levels of both rise during epithelial cell proliferation

  12. Pathogenesis of ‘BRCA Cancer’ Cell proliferation in breast/ovary, etc. Loss / inactivation of normal BRCA gene in a cell (chance)= LOH Use of less accurate DNA repair pathways Progressive accumulation of mutations Cancer

  13. Genetic Counseling • Risk assessment (familial + non-familial) • Education (risk factors + genetics 101) • Pre-test counseling • Motivation for testing / mental status • Limitations, benefits, risks, • Test procedure • Alternatives to testing • Management options

  14. Genetic Counseling (contd.) 4. Post-test counseling • Meaning of result reviewed • Patient response assessed • Patient’s plans for sharing results with family reviewed • Management plan formulated 5. Longitudinal follow-up? • Promote compliance with management plan • Psychological support • Update new developments

  15. Genetic Testing • Predictive testing • Known family mutation • Any result is meaningful • Genetic screening • No known family mutation • If no mutation found result is ‘indeterminate’

  16. Main Challenges of Genetic Testing • Cost (genetic screening) • Availability • > 50% of screening results ‘indeterminate’ • Variable ‘natural history’ of mutation carriers • Limitations of current management strategies • Unkown risk with ‘negative’ predictive testing

  17. GENETIC TESTING CRITERIA:Affected Individuals • Breast cancer < age 35 • Jewish and breast cancer < age 50 • Bilateral breast ca, first < age 50 • Male breast cancer • Epithelial ovarian cancer any age • 2+ close relatives (including self) & any combination of • Breast cancer < age 50 • Ovarian cancer • Male breast cancer • Jewish and breast / ovarian cancer any age • 3+ close relatives with breast / ovarian cancer

  18. METHODS OF GENETIC TESTING • Protein Truncation Test (PTT) • Gene Sequencing • Denaturing High Performance Liquid Chromatography (DHPLC) • Multiplex Ligation Dependent Probe Amplification (MLPA) • other

  19. Normal DNA: CTAGCATGTATAGGG  RNA: CUAGCAUGUAUAGGG  Polypeptide: Leu-Ala-Tyr-Ile-Gl  Mutant CTAGCATGAATAGGG  CUAGCAUGCAUAGGG  Leu-Ala-(stop)  Protein Truncation Test Normal protein Truncated protein Protein gel:

  20. ATCTTAGAGTGTCCC ATCTTAGTGTCCC DNA Sequencing A T C G A T C G Mutant (185delAG) Normal Start Start

  21. PTT vs. Sequencing

  22. Genetic Testing in Ontario Today Known mutation or Ashkenazi Jewish Sequence appropriate segment of DNA Unknown mutation Fresh blood  mRNA  cDNA: 1) MLPA – screens for large mutations 2) DHPLC – equivalent to ‘sequencing’ Sensitivity – 95% Specificity – 85-90%

  23. POPULATION vs. FAMILY ASCERTAINMENT

  24. MANAGEMENTOPTIONS FOR MUTATION CARRIERS X

  25. Prevention

  26. Risk-Reducing Mastectomy • ‘official’ risk reduction 90% in literature • Likely closer to 100% if total mastectomy • ~ 25% of women with mutations opt for it but wide variations (counseling, culture, etc.) • Revival of subcutaneous mastectomy? • Reconstruction gives better cosmetic result than after breast cancer surgery

  27. Salpingo-oophorectomy • Prevents ovarian & fallopian tube cancer • Lowers breast cancer risk by ~ 50 -80% - risk reduction greater if surgery earlier - risk reduction not affected by HRT - works at least as well for BRCA1 as BRCA2 • Peritoneal cancer risk likely over-stated • Ideally by age 40 for BRCA1 and age 45 for BRCA2 • TAH is optional

  28. Tamoxifen Benefits • Invasive cancer & DCIS reduced by 50% in all high risk subgroups including BRCA2 • Effect sustained after tamoxifen stopped • Non-signficant reduction in fractures BUT • Reduction in ER+ tumours only • No survival benefit to date • No apparent effect on BRCA1 carriers

  29. Tamoxifen Risks

  30. Raloxifene • Not an agonist in the uterus • Shorter half-life than tamoxifen • Not appropriate for pre-menopausal women

  31. NSABP P-2 (STAR) 20,000 women 5 yr. Gail risk 1.66% postmenopausal randomized 5 years tamoxifen raloxifene

  32. Oral Contraceptives • Reduce risk of ovarian cancer by 50% • Optimal duration is 5 years • No significant effect on breast cancer risk if taken ages 25 to 40.

  33. Breast Screening

  34. The Ideal 100% sensitivity DCIS invasive  1cm, node -ve The Reality 50% sensitivity DCIS rarely found 50% > 1 cm 40% node +ve Mammography Screening for Women with BRCA Mutations

  35. Limitations of Mammographyfor High Risk Screening • young age = dense breasts

  36. Limitations of Mammographyfor High Risk Screening • young age = dense breasts • Faster tumour growth • Earlier invasion • Less time for DCIS to calcify • BRCA1 pathology?

  37. Why should MRI be more sensitive than mammography? • Contrast agent (Gad –DTPA) • Tomographic slices (3-D)

  38. Disadvantages of MRI • $$$ • Lower specificity • Biopsies more difficult • Logistics • Claustrophobia

  39. Breast MRI Screening Studiesfor ‘High Familial Risk’ Women • Interval cancer rate < 10% • Sensitivity • MRI 71% - 91% • Mammography 23% - 40% • Ultrasound 32% - 40% • CBE 6% - 18% • Stage distribution more favourable

  40. False Positive Rates

  41. Does MRI screening improve survival?

  42. Evidence for effect of MRI screening on survival • Cohort studies • Comparison with historical controls • Randomized studies

  43. Prospective Cohort Study (CBCRA 2004) • Women with BRCA mutations • Screened for breast cancer • ‘MRI group’ (n=466) • ‘Control group’ (n=903) • Median follow-up = 3.3 yrs.

  44. Stage Distribution of Breast Cancer Cases

  45. Indications for Screening Breast MRI • Known BRCA mutation • Untested 1st degree relative of BRCA mutation carrier • Untested/ no family mutation but > 20% lifetime risk (BRACPRO, BOADICEA) • Chest irradiation < age 30, at least 8 yrs. Post treatment

  46. MRI Screening Protocol • Annually with mammography (or staggered q 6months) • Start age 30 • Reasonable to stop age 65-69

More Related