Title: Genetics and Risk of Breast Cancer
1Genetics and Risk of Breast Cancer
2Questions
- What is the role of mutation testing
- What is the risk to mutation carriers
- What is the evidence for intervention
- How does family history predict risk
- What lines of future research are required
3What is the likelihood of finding a mutation ?
4BRCA1 and BRCA2
- Mutations confer an autosomal dominant
susceptibility to Breast and Ovarian cancer with
high penetrance - In some populations there are common mutations
- These are not the only genes involved
5BRCA1 and BRCA2
- Population frequency (British Cases)
- BRCA1 0.11
- BRCA2 0.12 (Peto et.al. 1999)
- Estimate 16 of hereditary breast cancer
susceptibility is caused by these genes in UK.
6Determining Probability of Being a Gene Carrier
- Empirical data
- Logistic Regression Analysis
- Bayes calculation
7Ford et.al. 1997, Narod et.al. 1995
- 84 of BCLC families showed evidence of linkage
to BRCA1 or BRCA2. (4 affected members). - 76 of breast-ovarian families linked to BRCA1 (3
affected members, one ovarian).
8Peto et.al. 1999
- BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Analysis
- Status Mutation detected
- BRCA1 BRCA2
- Affected lt 35 9/254 6/254
- Affected 36-45 7/363 8/363
- Affected lt45, mother breast cancer 2/54
1/54 - Affected lt45, 1o with breast CAlt60 3/52
1/52 - Affected lt45, 1o with ovarian CA 3/5 0/5
- Affected 36-45, 2X 1o with breast lt60 1/8
3/8
9Schattuck Eidens et.al. 1997
- BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Analysis
- Status Mutation detected
- BRCA1 BRCA2
- Affected lt 35 5
- Affected 36 - 45 1-2
- Affected lt45, mother breast cancer 2
- Affected lt45, 1o with breast CAlt60 2
- Affected lt45, 1o with ovarian CA 6
- Affected 35, 1o relative with breast
ovarian 20 - Affected 35, Bilateral Breast Cancer 20
10Parmigiani et.al.1998
- Bayes Risk Calculation
- Uses population frequency of mutation
- Uses penetrance data for gene mutation
- Takes family structure into account
- Assumes all non BRCA1/BRCA2 cancer is sporadic
- Has been computerised
11CASH data Ford data
12Likelihood of identifying a mutation
- BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Detection
- Status Cyrillic Peto
- (BRCAPro)
- BRCA1 BRCA2 BRCA1 BRCA2
- Affected lt 35 2 0.3 4 2
- Affected lt45, 1o with breast CAlt60 4 2 6 2
- Affected lt45, 1o with ovarian CA 22 1.6 60 0
- Affected lt45 2X1o relative with breast
lt60 21 10 13 38
13Population Specific Mutations
- Ashkenazi Jewish Population Over 2 of population
-
- BRCA1 185delAG
- 5382insC
- BRCA2 6174delT
- Icelandic population 0.6 of population
- BRCA2 999del5
-
14Mutation Detection with Askenazi Jewish descent
- Lalloo et.al. 1998
- Breast cancer lt60 1/4
- 2 X Breast cancer lt70 3/10
- BCLC criteria 5/5
-
- Schattuck-Eidens et.al. 1997
- Affected age 40 12
- Affected at 40 1o relative breast 20
- Affected at 40 1o relative ovarian 35
15Male Breast Cancer
- Friedman et.al. 1997 (Californian Male Cases)
- 2/54 cases of male breast cancer had BRCA2
mutations - 17 had a 1o family history of breast cancer
16Conclusions
- In a small proportion of cases, mutation testing
for BRCA1 and BRCA2 would be expected to have a
high pickup rate. - Eg.
- 4 family members with breast cancer
- Breast cancer ltage 45 with 1o ovarian cancer
-
17Conclusions
- Different systems exist to predict likelihood of
detecting a mutation. - BRCApro
- Logistic regression curves
- Not all of these have been validated in clinical
practice.
18Conclusions
- Testing for the common Ashkenazi Jewish mutations
may be relevant, - In the presence of modest family history.
- with isolated young onset disease.
19What is the Risk to Mutation Carriers ?
20Risk to Mutation Carriers
- Derived from Linkage
- Easton et.al. 1993
- Ford et.al. 1994,1998
- Empirical data from common mutations
- Struewing et.al. 1997
- Steinumn et.al. 1998
21Risk To Mutation Carriers ()
- Easton et.al. Ford et.al.
Struewing Steinum ISD - BRCA1 BRCA2 BRCA12 BRCA2
(Population) - Br Ov Br Ov Br Ov Br
Ov Br O v - By age 40 19 0.6 12 0.0 -
- - - - - - By age 50 50 22 28 0.4 33 7
15 - - - - By age 60 54 30 48 7.4 -
- - - - - - By age 65 - - - -
- - - - 5.5 0.9 - By age 70 85 63 84 27 56 16
35 - - - - By age 75 - - - -
- - - - 7.9
1.5
22Conclusions
- BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations confer a high risk of
breast and ovarian cancer. - All studies have potential sources of bias, the
true risk will depend on the population and
mutation type.
23Modifying Risk to Gene Carriers
24Modifying Risk
- Screening Breast examination
- Mammography
- Ovarian Ultrasound
- Hormonal Manipulation Tamoxifen
- Surgical Intervention Mastectomy
- Oophorectomy
25Screening / Mammography
- Proven benefit when age gt 50 in individuals at
population risk - Meta-analysis, Kerlikowske JAMA 1995
- Conflicting Evidence for population screening
ages 40 to 49 - Some studies for, some against
- High Risk Screening
- Uncontrolled longitudinal follow up of high risk
cohort
26Screening / Mammography
- Chart et.al. 1997 - Canadian High Risk Programme
- 1044 women categorised as high, moderate or low
risk - 6 year follow up, mammography and breast
examination - in high risk group 7/381 had tumours at
presentation - 5/381 high risk developed tumours on follow up
- Lalloo et.al. 1998 - Manchester high risk breast
clinic - 1259 women with a lifetime risk of breast cancer
gt 1 in 6 - 7 tumours prevalent (4 were in situ), 9 tumours
incident - 2 tumours were detected by self examination
between screens - 6 of incident tumours were palpable
27Tamoxifen prevention Studies
- The Breast Cancer Prevention Trial (P1)
- Women at increased Risk, 13388 cases, 5 year
follow up - Tamoxifen reduced breast cancer risk (RR 0.5)
- Increased endometrial cancer and pulmonary
embolus cataract - Overall mortality not significantly lower
- Royal Marsden Chemoprevention Trial
- 8 year follow up of 2471 women, power 90 for 50
effect - No detectable effect on breast cancer
28Hormone Replacement Therapy
- No study has looked at HRT in BRCA mutation
carriers - Generally, HRT confers a small increased risk
of breast cancer. - HRT decreases cardiovascular and osteoporotic
events. - In one large meta-analysis (anonymous 1997)
positive family history did not show a
significantly increased risk of breast cancer in
HRT users as opposed to non-users. Numbers
analysed were small. - Breast cancer in BRCA1 carriers is often
oestrogen receptor negative.
29Prophylactic Surgery
- Mastectomy
- Various modelling approaches looking at
cost/benefit - Hartmann et.al. 1999 Retrospective study
- Estimated 90 reduction in breast cancer
incidence - Did not take other post-operative morbidity into
account - Oophorectomy
- Rebbeck et.al. 1998 (ASHG abstract)
- reduction in breast cancer in BRCA1 mutation
carriers - Papillary serous carcinoma of peritoneum may
arise in BRCA1 carriers after oophorectomy.
(Schorge et.al.1998, Piver et.al. 1993.)
30Conclusions
- The benefits of prophylactic tamoxifen remain
unproven. - Family history of breast cancer is not
necessarily a contraindication for HRT. - More studies are needed
31Conclusions
- Prophylactic mastectomy can have a role in
patients at high risk of breast cancer. - Prophylactic oophorectomy may reduce risk of
ovarian cancer and breast cancer. Peritoneal
tumours may still arise.
32Conclusions
- Screening of high risk patients can be effective
in detecting breast cancer. - Overall benefit of screening remains to be
demonstrated.
33Presenting Risk
34Lifetime Absolute Risk
- Your lifetime risk of dying is 100
35Relative Risk
- Your Risk of dying is 1X that of the population
36Absolute Risk over Time
- Your risk of dying over the next 10 years is
- 2
37Presenting Risk
- Absolute Risk over a given time is
- Easy to understand
- Easy to base decisions upon
- Relative Risk can be converted to absolute risk
- Assuming relative risk is constant over time
- Assuming individual belongs to the population
studied - (Dupont and Plumber 1996)
38How Can Risk be Estimated from Family History ?
39Risk Analysis - Situation A
- Mother and Sister Affected with Breast Cancer
60
40Risk Analysis - Situation B
- Three Relatives Affected with Breast Cancer
41Risk Analysis - Situation C
- Mother Affected with Ovarian Cancer and Sister
with Breast Cancer
42Risk Analysis - Situation D
- Mother affected with bilateral breast cancer
40/55
40
43Risk Analysis - Situation E
- Two second degree relatives with breast cancer lt
age 60
44Risk Analysis - Situation F
- Mother affected with breast cancer age 45 and
ovarian age 65
45Estimation of Risk
- Empirical Data Studies
- OPCS data set 3295 cases of breast cancer
- CASH data set 4730 cases of breast cancer
- Meta-analysis - Pharoah et.al. 74 published
studies - Modelling of Data
- CASH data
- Gail Model 2,852 cases of breast cancer
- Linkage/Computer Analysis
- Cyrillic (Uses CASH data)
46Empirical Estimation of Risk
- Advantages
- No model is assumed
- Information is directly applicable
- Disadvantages
- Data is population specific
- Data only covers a small range of situations
- Large studies are needed for meaningful data
47CASH data (Claus et.al. 1990)
- Kaplan-Meier estimates of cumulative risk
- By age of onset of breast cancer in 1o relative
- Hazard ratios for other family histories
- Sister and mother affected RR 5.9 (3.9-8.9)
- Two sisters affected RR 3.6 (2.1-6.1)
- One mother, 2 sisters RR 17 (9.4-31)
48Meta-AnalysisPharoah et.al.1997
- Applicable to limited situations
- Affected 1o relative RR 2.1 (2.0-2.2)
- Mother and sister RR 3.6 (2.5-5.0)
- Sister affected lt50 RR 2.7 (2.4-3.2)
- Mother affected lt50 RR 2.0 (1.7-2.4)
49Estimation of Risk Using Models
- Advantages
- Data can be widened to a greater range of
situations - Disadvantages
-
- Can generalise to situations where data is not
applicable - Risks are often based on a small number of data
points - Risks calculated are population specific
50Modelling of Breast Cancer Risk
- Gail Model (BCDDP data)
- Incorporates age at menarche, parity, and
affected 1o relatives - Curves given to estimate 10, 20 and 30 year risk
- No mode of inheritance assumed
- CASH data model
- Using age of onset and first degree relative data
only - Segregation analysis suggests dominant major
locus - Give cumulative risk curves based on relatives
and age of onset
51Linkage/Computer Analysis
- Likelihood of developing breast cancer
-
- Likelihood of dominant mutation in family
- Likelihood of carrying mutation
- Likelihood of developing cancer if mutation
carrier - (Mendel to determine LOD score, CASH data
penetrance figures/ current age)
52Linkage/Computer Risk Analysis
- Advantages
- Generates a risk for a complex situation
- Uses age of onset
- Uses unaffected individuals
- Easy to apply
- Removes subjective element
- Disadvantages
- Assumes single dominantly inherited gene
- Assumes one set of penetrance values for a single
gene - Prone to rubbish in, rubbish out phenomena
- Essentially unvalidated
53So Which is Best ?
5420 Year Risk Comparison
55Conclusions
- Different systems for risk estimation can give
different results. - Empirical risk calculation systems can only apply
to well defined situations. - Computerised risk assessment is based on
assumptions that are not necessarily valid.
56Where do we start screening ?
57Current Guidelines
- SIGN Guideline - 3 times population risk
- 1o relative with bilateral breast cancer
- 1o relative with breast cancer lt40
- 1o male relative with breast cancer
- 1o relative with breast and ovarian
- 2 first or second degree relatives with breast
cancer lt 60 - 3 first or second degree relatives with breast
cancer
58Bilateral breast cancer in 1o relative
- 2-5 of breast cancer is bilateral
- CASH data (USA families)
- risk same as if unilaterally affected relative
- Tulinius et.al. 1992 (Icelandic families)
- RR 4.4 (3.39-6.49), RR 9 if first onset lt45
- Houlston (British families, OPCS data)
- RR 4.78 (0.12 to 26.62) postmenopausal onset
- RR 7.78 (0.94 to 28.08) premenopausal onset
5910 Year Risk Estimates
60Conclusions
- Setting the criteria for screening should depend
on - Estimation of absolute risk (age dependant)
- Effectiveness of screening (may be age specific)
- Resources available
- A sensible risk estimation system
61Future Research
- Validation of risk estimation
- Detailed comparison of methods of risk analysis
- Application to pedigrees with known outcome
- (A retrospective-prospective study !)
62Future Research
- Validation of screening protocols for high risk
individuals.
63Future Research(Long term)
- Audit of effectiveness of screening protocols and
accuracy of risks calculated. - This will be greatly facilitated by an effective
computerised database.