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Breast Cancer Risk and Risk Assessment Models

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Breast Cancer Risk and Risk Assessment Models Jessica Ray, MS, CGC Cancer Genetic Counselor Ambry Genetic Laboratories jray_at_ambrygen.com Vida! Educational Series ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Breast Cancer Risk and Risk Assessment Models


1
Breast Cancer Risk and Risk Assessment Models
  • Jessica Ray, MS, CGC
  • Cancer Genetic Counselor
  • Ambry Genetic Laboratories
  • jray_at_ambrygen.com

Vida! Educational Series - Promoting Good
Health
2
Learning Objectives
  • Identify Personal and Family Characteristics that
    may indicate an inherited increased risk for
    cancer
  • Understand the role of genetic counseling in
    assessing patients with possible hereditary
    cancer syndromes
  • Understand characteristics, advantages,
    limitations, and differences of the Gail and
    BRCAPRO risk-assessment tools used by clinicians
    to help establish cancer risk

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Who Is at High Risk?
  • Atypia
  • 5-year Gail risk gt1.7
  • 2 or more 2nd-degree premenopausal affected
    relatives
  • Combined estrogen-progesterone hormone therapy
    for more than 10 years
  • Mammographically dense breasts
  • Obesity

5
Who Is at Very High Risk?
  • Personal history of BC lt50
  • BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carrier
  • 2 or more 1st-degree relatives with BC
  • Lobular carcinoma in situ (LCIS)
  • Atypia and a 1st-degree relative with BC

6
What is Genetic Counseling?
  • Genetic Counseling is a communication
    process that deals with both the medical and
    psychological issues associated with the
    occurrence of a genetic disorder in a family
  • Cancer genetic counseling focuses on hereditary
    cancer syndromes
  • This process involves one or more trained
    professionals to help the individual or family

7
Reasons for Seeking Genetics Consultation
  • To learn about
  • Personal risk for cancer
  • Childrens risk for cancer
  • Familys risk for cancer
  • Risks for developing cancer if you have a cancer
    gene
  • Recommendations for screening, surveillance,
    and/or treatment
  • Educational information
  • To obtain genetic DNA testing

J Med Genet 2000 37866-874
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Key Flags that Warrant Genetic Counseling
  • Significant family medical history-breast,
    ovarian, prostate, colon, uterine, melanoma,
    pancreatic, or other cancers
  • Cancer occurs in every generation
  • Early age of onset (lt 50 years)
  • Male breast cancer
  • Bilateral cancer, or multiple primary cancers in
    one individual
  • Known family genetic mutation
  • Ethnicity Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry

11
Sporadic, Familial or Hereditary?
  • 5-10 cancers have a hereditary component
  • Over 200 hereditary cancer syndromes described
  • Hereditary cancer tends to occur at younger ages
    than sporadic cancer, often bilateral, multifocal
  • Lifetime risks of cancer exceed cancer risks due
    to noninherited factors (early menarche,
    nulliparity, late age of menopause, HRT, etc)
  • Majority show an autosomal dominant inheritance
    pattern (few are recessive)

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Average Age of Diagnosis Hereditary
Sporadic
  • Breast 62
  • Ovarian 60
  • Prostate 71
  • Breast 41
  • Ovarian 40-50
  • Prostate 63

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Gail Model
National Cancer Institute http//www.cancer.gov/b
crisktool/Default.aspx
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Gail Model Advantages
  • Identifies women who could benefit from
    preventive interventions may assist in making
    clinical decisions (Determination of eligibility
    for tamoxifen for breast cancer risk
    reductionGail scoregt1.7)
  • Incorporates risk factors other than family
    history (eg, reproductive variables, atypical
    hyperplasia, history of breast biopsies)
  • Calculation of breast cancer risk in absence of
    family history in women
  • Shows that BC risk increases with age and,
    therefore, may prompt discussion about the
    importance of BC screening
  • Used to counsel and educate women, especially
    those who overestimate their BC risk

25
Gail Model Limitations
  • Not validated for black, Hispanic, and other
    ethnic groups
  • Only solicits family history involving
    first-degree relatives
  • May underestimate risk when family history is on
    fathers side
  • Does not take into account age at which relatives
    developed BC
  • Effect of number of breast biopsies (without
    atypical hyperplasia) may cause inflated risk
    estimates
  • May underestimate risk for women with
    demonstrated mutations of the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes

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BRCAPRO - Advantages
  • Incorporates both affected and unaffected family
    members in estimation of carrier probability
  • incorporates maternal and paternal breast and
    ovarian cancer history
  • age at cancer diagnosis, current ages, ages
    relatives became deceased considered
  • Ashkenazi Jewish ethnicity taken into
    consideration
  • Oophorectomy status and breast cancer receptor
    status considered

28
BRCAPRO - Limitations
  • Dependent on published estimates of prevalence
    and penetrance of BRCA1 and BRCA2
  • Does not consider more distant family history
    past 1st and 2nd degree relatives
  • Does not consider other potential susceptibility
    genes with features similar to BRCA1 and BRCA2

29
When Do You Offer Testing?
  • American Society of Clinical Oncology recommends
    genetic testing
  • The individual has a personal or family history
    of features suggestive of a genetic cancer
    susceptibility condition
  • The test can be adequately interpreted
  • The results will aid in diagnosis or influence
    the medical or surgical management of the
    patient or family members at hereditary risk of
    cancer
  • ASCO recommendations
  • Genetic testing only be done in the setting of
    pre-and post-test counseling,
  • Should discuss possible risks and benefits of
    cancer early detection and prevention modalities

30
Implications/Important Points
  • What do we offer individuals at high risk for
    hereditary cancers who test negative for a
    genetic mutation?
  • Negative genetic test result does not mean No
    Increased Risk!!
  • AZCC High Risk Clinic for individuals at greater
    risk of developing cancer
  • Must continue studies to find other genes
    responsible for hereditary cancers
  • Must develop more advanced, individualized risk
    assessment tools
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