| Literature DB >> 27438779 |
Taru A Muranen1, Nasim Mavaddat2, Sofia Khan1, Rainer Fagerholm1, Liisa Pelttari1, Andrew Lee2, Kristiina Aittomäki3, Carl Blomqvist4, Douglas F Easton2, Heli Nevanlinna5.
Abstract
The risk of developing breast cancer is increased in women with family history of breast cancer and particularly in families with multiple cases of breast or ovarian cancer. Nevertheless, many women with a positive family history never develop the disease. Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) based on the risk effects of multiple common genetic variants have been proposed for individual risk assessment on a population level. We investigate the applicability of the PRS for risk prediction within breast cancer families. We studied the association between breast cancer risk and a PRS based on 75 common genetic variants in 52 Finnish breast cancer families including 427 genotyped women and pedigree information on ~4000 additional individuals by comparing the affected to healthy family members, as well as in a case-control dataset comprising 1272 healthy population controls and 1681 breast cancer cases with information on family history. Family structure was summarized using the BOADICEA risk prediction model. The PRS was associated with increased disease risk in women with family history of breast cancer as well as in women within the breast cancer families. The odds ratio (OR) for breast cancer within the family dataset was 1.55 [95 % CI 1.26-1.91] per unit increase in the PRS, similar to OR in unselected breast cancer cases of the case-control dataset (1.49 [1.38-1.62]). High PRS-values were informative for risk prediction in breast cancer families, whereas for the low PRS-categories the results were inconclusive. The PRS is informative in women with family history of breast cancer and should be incorporated within pedigree-based clinical risk assessment.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Common variants; Hereditary; PRS; Risk
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27438779 PMCID: PMC4963452 DOI: 10.1007/s10549-016-3897-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872
Association between the PRS and breast cancer risk in case–control and breast cancer family datasets
| Sample group | N | PRS |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR [95 % CI] | ||||
| Case–control dataset | Healthy population controls | 1269 | Reference | |
| All BC cases | 1689 | 1.56 [1.45–1.68] | 9.2E−31 | |
| Unselected breast cancer cases | 1299 | 1.49 [1.38–1.62] | 3.5E−23 | |
| Sporadic breast cancer cases | 1020 | 1.41 [1.30–1.54] | 5.1E−16 | |
| Index cases from small families | 334 | 1.85 [1.63–2.11] | 8.8E−21 | |
| Index cases from large families | 305 | 1.81 [1.59–2.06] | 2.0E−19 | |
| 52 breast cancer families | Affected family members | 181 | 1.82 [1.55–2.13] | 1.8E−13 |
| Affected family members with no affected first-degree relatives | 50 | 1.62 [1.22–2.14] | 7.7E−4 | |
| Affected family members with one affected first-degree relative | 58 | 1.97 [1.52–2.57] | 4.0E−7 | |
| Affected family members with two affected first-degree relatives | 47 | 1.74 [1.30–2.33] | 1.8E−4 | |
| Affected family members with three or more affected first-degree relatives | 26 | 2.05 [1.40–3.02] | 2.5E−4 | |
| Healthy family members (52 breast cancer families) vs. healthy population controlsa | 246 vs. 1269 | 1.29 [1.12–1.48] | 3.4E−4 | |
aTest for association between PRS and positive family history of breast cancer comparing healthy women from the breast cancer families to healthy population controls
Fig. 1Estimated effect sizes (odds ratios: OR with confidence intervals: CI) by percentile of the PRS in the 52 breast cancer families