| Literature DB >> 25700605 |
M R Wevers1, M K Schmidt, E G Engelhardt, S Verhoef, M J Hooning, M Kriege, C Seynaeve, M Collée, C J van Asperen, R A E M Tollenaar, L B Koppert, A J Witkamp, E J T Rutgers, N K Aaronson, M A Rookus, M G E M Ausems.
Abstract
It is expected that rapid genetic counseling and testing (RGCT) will lead to increasing numbers of breast cancer (BC) patients knowing their BRCA1/2 carrier status before primary surgery. Considering the potential impact of knowing one's status on uptake and timing of risk-reducing contralateral mastectomy (RRCM), we aimed to evaluate trends over time in RRCM, and differences between carriers identified either before (predictively) or after (diagnostically) diagnosis. We collected data from female BRCA1/2 mutation carriers diagnosed with BC between 1995 and 2009 from four Dutch university hospitals. We compared the timing of genetic testing and RRCM in relation to diagnosis in 1995-2000 versus 2001-2009 for all patients, and predictively and diagnostically tested patients separately. Of 287 patients, 219 (76%) had a diagnostic BRCA1/2 test. In this cohort, the median time from diagnosis to DNA testing decreased from 28 months for those diagnosed between 1995 and 2000 to 14 months for those diagnosed between 2001 and 2009 (p < 0.001). Similarly, over time women in this cohort underwent RRCM sooner after diagnosis (median of 77 vs. 27 months, p = 0.05). Predictively tested women who subsequently developed BC underwent an immediate RRCM significantly more often than women who had a diagnostic test (21/61, 34%, vs. 13/170, 7.6 %, p < 0.001). Knowledge of carrying a BRCA1/2 mutation when diagnosed with BC influenced decisions concerning primary surgery. Additionally, in more recent years, women who had not undergone predictive testing were more likely to undergo diagnostic DNA testing and RRCM sooner after diagnosis. This suggests the need for RGCT to guide treatment decisions.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25700605 PMCID: PMC4559099 DOI: 10.1007/s10689-015-9788-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fam Cancer ISSN: 1389-9600 Impact factor: 2.375
Clinical characteristics of breast cancer patients carrying a BRCA1/2 mutation
| Characteristics | Breast cancer diagnosis 1995–2000 (N = 183) | Breast cancer diagnosis 2001–2009 (N = 104) | Total |
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA test before diagnosis | DNA test after diagnosis |
| DNA test before diagnosis | DNA test after diagnosis |
| |||
| Number (%) | 22 (12 %) | 161 (88 %) | 46 (44 %) | 58 (56 %) | <0.0001 | |||
| Affected gene, n (%) | 0.01 | |||||||
| | 22 (100 %) | 127 (78.9 %) | 0.02 | 37 (80.4 %) | 34 (58.6 %) | 0.02 | 220 (77 %) | |
| | 0 (0 %) | 34 (21.1 %) | 9 (19.6 %) | 24 (41.4 %) | 67 (23 %) | |||
| Age at DNA test, years | 0.42 | 0.23 | 0.40 | |||||
| Mean (SD) | 42.9 (8.7) | 44.7 (9.8) | 42.4 (11.2) | 44.4 (8.3) | 44.1 (9.7) | |||
| Range | 23–59 | 20–72 | 22–75 | 24–63 | 20–75 | |||
| Age at breast cancer diagnosis in years | 0.33 | 0.14 | 0.04 | |||||
| Mean (SD) | 43.8 (8.8) | 41.7 (9.2) | 46.5 (12.0) | 42.8 (8.0) | 42.9 (9.5) | |||
| Range | 23–61 | 19–71 | 27–77 | 24–60 | 19–77 | |||
| DCIS or invasive breast cancer, n (%) | 0.01 | 0.73 | 0.58 | |||||
| DCIS | 4 (18.2 %) | 7 (4.3 %) | 4 (8.7 %) | 4 (6.9 %) | 19 (7 %) | |||
| Invasive breast cancer | 18 (81.8 %) | 154 (95.7 %) | 42 (91.3 %) | 54 (93.1 %) | 268 (93 %) | |||
| Lymph node status, n (%) | 0.37 | 0.08 | 0.14 | |||||
| Positive | 6 (30 %) | 60 (40.5 %) | 9 (20.9 %) | 20 (37.7 %) | 95 (36 %) | |||
| Negative | 14 (70 %) | 88 (59.5 %) | 34 (79.1 %) | 33 (62.3 %) | 169 (64 %) | |||
| Missing | 23 | |||||||
Tumor stage (n, % without unknowns) Total | 0.40 | 0.03 | 0.71 | |||||
| Stage 0/DCIS | 4 (20.0 %) | 7 (6.0 %) | 4 (12.9 %) | 4 (10.3 %) | 19 (9.2 %) | |||
| Stage 1 | 9 (45.0 %) | 42 (35.9 %) | 15 (48.4 %) | 7 (17.9 %) | 73 (35.3 %) | |||
| Stage 2 | 6 (30.0 %) | 57 (48.7 %) | 9 (29.0 %) | 23 (59.0 %) | 95 (45.9 %) | |||
| Stage 3 | 1 (5.0 %) | 11 (9.4 %) | 3 (9.7 %) | 5 (12.8 %) | 20 (9.7 %) | |||
| Unknown | 2 | 44 | 15 | 19 | 80 | |||
Immediate and delayed risk reducing contralateral mastectomy (RRCM), differences between patients who had a predictive test versus diagnostic test
| RRCM | BREAST cancer diagnosis 1995–2000 | BREAST cancer diagnosis 2001–2009 | Total 1995–2009 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | DNA test before diagnosis | DNA test after diagnosis | Sub-total |
| DNA test before diagnosis | DNA test after diagnosis | Sub-total |
| |
| Immediate RRCM | 9/20 (45.0 %) | 10/122 (8.2 %) | 19/142 (13.4 %) | <0.0001 | 12/41 (29.3 %) | 3/48 (6.2 %) | 15/89 (16.9 %) | 0.004 | 34/231 (14.7 %) |
| Delayed RRCMa | 7/11 (63.6 %) | 44/95 (46.3 %) | 51/106 (48.1 %) | 0.28 | 9/21 (42.9 %) | 13/24 (54.2 %) | 22/45 (48.9 %) | 0.45 | 73/151 (48.3 %) |
Only for patients with a primary unilateral breast cancer
Differences in uptake of RRCM between predictively and diagnostically tested women within and between 1995–2000 and 2001–2009 were analysed using Chi square tests
RRCM risk reducing contralateral mastectomy
aFor delayed RRCM, patients from LUMC were excluded
Fig. 1Kaplan Meier curves of cumulative RRCM incidence a Cumulative RRCM (immediate or delayed) incidence from time of breast cancer diagnosis comparing two time periods in both predictively and diagnostically tested patients b Cumulative RRCM (immediate or delayed) incidence from time of breast cancer diagnosis comparing two time periods in patients who had a predictive test c Cumulative RRCM (immediate or delayed) incidence from time of breast cancer diagnosis comparing two time periods in patients who had a diagnostic test d Cumulative delayed RRCM incidence from time of DNA test result in patients who had a diagnostic test. *RRCM risk reducing contralateral mastectomy
Timing of risk reducing contralateral mastectomy (RRCM) in women with BRCA-associated breast cancer
| RRCM after breast cancer diagnosis | Breast cancer patients who had a DNA test before diagnosis (predictive) (n = 53) | Breast cancer patients who had a DNA test after diagnosis (diagnostic) (n = 127) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer diagnosis 1995–2000 | Breast cancer diagnosis 2001–2009 |
| Breast cancer diagnosis 1995–2000 | Breast cancer diagnosis 2001–2009 |
| |
| Age at RRCM in years | 0.62 | 0.55 | ||||
| Mean (SD) | 42.1 (7.9) | 44.2 (10.0) | 41.8 (7.8) | 40.3 (7.7) | ||
| Median (range) | 41.5 (25–53) | 45.0 (27–71) | 41.0 (22–62) | 40.5 (25–54) | ||
| Median time in months between diagnosis and RRCMa | 2 | 15 | 0.14 | 77 | 27 | 0.05 |
RRCM 2001–2009 versus 1995–2000 HR (95 % CI)b | 0.73 (0.36–1.48) | 1.72 (0.91–3.27) | ||||
Only for patients with information on whether having undergone RRCM (from Erasmus MC Cancer Institute, NKI and UMCU), who had unilateral breast cancer. Immediate and delayed RRCM were analyzed together
RRCM risk reducing contralateral mastectomy
aKaplan–Meier analyses for predictive and diagnostic patients
bSeparate Cox regression models for predictive and diagnostic patients, adjusted for age at diagnosis, nodal status, and chemotherapy