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Assessment and Counseling for Women With a Family History of Breast Cancer

296

Citations

51

References

1995

Year

TLDR

Many women seek breast‑cancer risk information, yet only a minority have high‑penetrance family histories; risk prediction models and BRCA1/2 knowledge guide clinicians in assessing familial risk and counseling. The authors provide a primary‑care guide to classify families as moderate or high risk, estimate individual risk, and counsel women when surveillance data are limited. The guide outlines criteria for selecting women for inherited breast‑cancer mutation testing.

Abstract

More women in all risk categories are seeking information regarding their individual breast cancer risk, and there is a need for their primary care clinicians to be able to assess familial risk factors for breast cancer, provide individualized risk information, and offer surveillance recommendations. Estimates of the number of women with a family history of breast cancer range from approximately 5% to 20%, depending on the population surveyed. Many of these women will not have a family history that suggests the presence of a highly penetrant breast cancer susceptibility gene. However, a small subset of such women will come from families with a striking incidence of breast and other cancers often associated with inherited mutations. The development and refinement of risk prediction models provide an epidemiologic basis for counseling women with a family history that does not appear related to a dominant susceptibility gene. contrast, the recent isolation of BRCA1, the localization of BRCA2, and the acknowledgement that additional breast cancer susceptibility genes must exist provide a molecular basis for counseling some high-risk women. We present a guide for primary care clinicians that may be helpful in defining families as moderate or high risk, in determining individual risk in women with a family history of breast cancer based on this distinction, and for counseling women in a setting where the data necessary to design surveillance and prevention strategies are lacking. We include criteria for selecting women who may be candidates for detection of inherited mutations in breast cancer susceptibility genes.

References

YearCitations

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