| Literature DB >> 19338681 |
Anna P Sokolenko1, Dmitry A Voskresenskiy, Aglaya G Iyevleva, Elena M Bit-Sava, Nadezhda I Gutkina, Maxim S Anisimenko, Nathalia Yu Sherina, Nathalia V Mitiushkina, Yulia M Ulibina, Olga S Yatsuk, Olga A Zaitseva, Evgeny N Suspitsin, Alexandr V Togo, Valery A Pospelov, Sergey P Kovalenko, Vladimir F Semiglazov, Evgeny N Imyanitov.
Abstract
Although the probability of both parents being affected by BRCA1 mutations is not negligible, such families have not been systematically described in the literature. Here we present a large breast-ovarian cancer family, where 3 sisters and 1 half-sister inherited maternal BRCA1 5382insC mutation while the remaining 2 sisters carried paternal BRCA1 1629delC allele. No BRCA1 homozygous mutations has been detected, that is consistent with the data on lethality of BRCA1 knockout mice. This report exemplifies that the identification of a single cancer-predisposing mutation within the index patient may not be sufficient in some circumstances. Ideally, all family members affected by breast or ovarian tumor disease have to be subjected to the DNA testing, and failure to detect the mutation in any of them calls for the search of the second cancer-associated allele.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19338681 PMCID: PMC2653717 DOI: 10.1186/1897-4287-7-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hered Cancer Clin Pract ISSN: 1731-2302 Impact factor: 2.857
Figure 1Pedigree of the breast-ovarian cancer family with 2 BRCA1 mutations. Circles and squares indicate females and males, respectively. Crossed symbols are used for deceased subjects; age at death is given after the letter "d", otherwise current age is provided. Black circles correspond to females affected by breast or ovarian cancer; half-filled circles are used for yet healthy BRCA1 mutation carriers; gray symbols depict subjects with unknown or non-breast-ovarian tumors. BC – breast cancer; OC – ovarian cancer; age at cancer diagnosis is given in brackets. All tested subjects carried either BRCA1 5382insC or BRCA1 1629delC allele, i.e. missing information on the BRCA1 status indicates that DNA from this family member has not been analyzed. Index cases are designated by arrows (see the text).