Prevalence and Type ofBRCAMutations in Hispanics Undergoing Genetic Cancer Risk Assessment in the Southwestern United States: A Report From the Clinical Cancer Genetics Community Research Network

Author:

Weitzel Jeffrey N.1,Clague Jessica1,Martir-Negron Arelis1,Ogaz Raquel1,Herzog Josef1,Ricker Charité1,Jungbluth Chelsy1,Cina Cheryl1,Duncan Paul1,Unzeitig Gary1,Saldivar J. Salvador1,Beattie Mary1,Feldman Nancy1,Sand Sharon1,Port Danielle1,Barragan Deborah I.1,John Esther M.1,Neuhausen Susan L.1,Larson Garrett P.1

Affiliation:

1. Jeffrey N. Weitzel, Jessica Clague, Arelis Martir-Negron, Raquel Ogaz, Josef Herzog, Sharon Sand, Danielle Port, Deborah I. Barragan, Susan L. Neuhausen, and Garrett P. Larson, City of Hope, Duarte; Charité Ricker, University of Southern California, Los Angeles; Cheryl Cina, St Joseph Hospital, Orange; Mary Beattie, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco; Nancy Feldman, Olive View–University of California, Los Angeles, Medical Center, Sylmar; Esther M. John, Cancer Prevention Institute of...

Abstract

PurposeTo determine the prevalence and type of BRCA1 and BRCA2 (BRCA) mutations among Hispanics in the Southwestern United States and their potential impact on genetic cancer risk assessment (GCRA).Patients and MethodsHispanics (n = 746) with a personal or family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer were enrolled in an institutional review board–approved registry and received GCRA and BRCA testing within a consortium of 14 clinics. Population-based Hispanic breast cancer cases (n = 492) enrolled in the Northern California Breast Cancer Family Registry, negative by sequencing for BRCA mutations, were analyzed for the presence of the BRCA1 ex9-12del large rearrangement.ResultsDeleterious BRCA mutations were detected in 189 (25%) of 746 familial clinic patients (124 BRCA1, 65 BRCA2); 21 (11%) of 189 were large rearrangement mutations, of which 62% (13 of 21) were BRCA1 ex9-12del. Nine recurrent mutations accounted for 53% of the total. Among these, BRCA1 ex9-12del seems to be a Mexican founder mutation and represents 10% to 12% of all BRCA1 mutations in clinic- and population-based cohorts in the United States.ConclusionBRCA mutations were prevalent in the largest study of Hispanic breast and/or ovarian cancer families in the United States to date, and a significant proportion were large rearrangement mutations. The high frequency of large rearrangement mutations warrants screening in every case. We document the first Mexican founder mutation (BRCA1 ex9-12del), which, along with other recurrent mutations, suggests the potential for a cost-effective panel approach to ancestry-informed GCRA.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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