Estimated risk of radiation-induced breast cancer from mammographic screening for young BRCA mutation carriers Journal Article


Authors: Berrington De Gonzalez, A.; Berg, C. D.; Visvanathan, K.; Robson, M.
Article Title: Estimated risk of radiation-induced breast cancer from mammographic screening for young BRCA mutation carriers
Abstract: BRCA mutation carriers are recommended to start mammographic screening for breast cancer as early as age 25-30 years. We used an excess relative risk model (based on a pooled analysis of three cohorts with 7600 subjects who received radiation exposure) to estimate the lifetime risk of radiation-induced breast cancer from five annual mammographic screenings in young (<40 years) BRCA mutation carriers. We then estimated the reduction in breast cancer mortality required to outweigh the radiation risk. Breast cancer rates for mutation carriers were based on a pooled analysis of 22 pedigree studies with 8139 subjects. For BRCA1 mutation carriers, the estimated lifetime risk of radiation-induced breast cancer mortality per 10 000 women resulting from annual mammography was 26 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 14 to 49) for screening at age 25-29 years, 20 (95% CI = 11 to 39) for screening at age 30-34 years, and 13 (95% CI = 7 to 23) for screening at age 35-39 years. To outweigh these risks, screening would have to reduce breast cancer mortality by 51% (95% CI = 27% to 96%) at age 25-29 years, by 12% (95% CI = 6% to 23%) at age 30-34 years, and by 4% (95% CI = 2% to 7%) at age 35-39 years; estimates were similar for BRCA2 mutation carriers. If we assume that the mortality reduction from mammography is 15%-25% or less for young women, these results suggest that there would be no net benefit from annual mammographic screening of BRCA mutation carriers at age 25-29 years; the net benefit would be zero or small at age 30-34 years, but there should be some net benefit at age 35 or older. These results depend on a number of assumptions due to the absence of empiric data. The impact of varying these assumptions was therefore examined. © The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Keywords: adult; gene mutation; major clinical study; mutation; breast cancer; risk factors; cancer screening; mass screening; age factors; breast neoplasms; brca1 protein; brca2 protein; heterozygote; cancer mortality; radiation exposure; risk assessment; pedigree; oncogene; mammography; genes, brca1; genes, brca2; models, statistical; neoplasms, radiation-induced
Journal Title: JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Volume: 101
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0027-8874
Publisher: Oxford University Press  
Date Published: 2009-02-01
Start Page: 205
End Page: 209
Language: English
DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djn440
PUBMED: 19176458
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 14" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "CODEN: JNCIA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Mark E Robson
    676 Robson