Gene Linked to Breast Cancer Risk
Reported October 28, 2005
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- British researchers have uncovered another gene that
appears to significantly raise the risk of breast cancer among some women.
Their study shows women with a faulty version of the CHEK2 gene are more likely
to develop the disease when compared to non-carriers. Julian Peto, from The
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and colleagues tested 469
patients with bilateral breast cancer for the CHEK2 gene.
AN analysis of the data revealed, first-degree relatives of these women had
nearly a 60 percent cumulative risk of developing breast cancer by age 80.
Compared to about a 24 percent chance for relatives of women with a normal
version of the gene and breast cancer in both breasts, and about an 8 percent
risk for women in the general population.
The authors note about 2 percent of women with breast cancer in both breasts
will test positive for the faulty version of the CHEK2 gene. They believe
testing women with a family history of breast cancer for the gene might help
doctors better predict who will eventually develop the disease.
They also believe women with breast cancer in both breast and their families may
be good candidates for the identification of other genes associated with the
disease.
SOURCE: The Lancet, 2005;366:1554-1557
|