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The role of polygenic risk and susceptibility genes in breast cancer over the course of life

Authors :
Mars, Nina
Widén, Elisabeth
Kerminen, Sini
Meretoja, Tuomo
Pirinen, Matti
della Briotta Parolo, Pietro
Palta, Priit
Palotie, Aarno
Kaprio, Jaakko
Joensuu, Heikki
Daly, Mark J.
Ripatti, Samuli
FinnGen
Mäkelä, Johanna
Auranen, Annika
Jussila, Airi
Uusitalo-Järvinen, Hannele
Kankaanranta, Hannu
Uusitalo, Hannu
Peltola, Jukka
Kähönen, Mika
Laitinen, Tarja
Salmi, Teea
Laivuori, Hannele
Shcherban, Anastasia
Siirtola, Harri
Complex Disease Genetics
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
Centre of Excellence in Complex Disease Genetics
Elisabeth Ingrid Maria Widen / Principal Investigator
Genomic Discoveries and Clinical Translation
HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center
Clinicum
Statistical and population genetics
Helsinki Institute for Information Technology
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Biostatistics Helsinki
Genomics of Neurological and Neuropsychiatric Disorders
Research Programs Unit
Research Programme of Molecular Medicine
Aarno Palotie / Principal Investigator
Department of Public Health
Heikki Joensuu / Principal Investigator
Department of Oncology
Samuli Olli Ripatti / Principal Investigator
HUS Neurocenter
Department of Neurosciences
HUS Helsinki and Uusimaa Hospital District
Tampere University
Tays Research Services
TAYS Cancer Centre
Department of Gastroenterology
Eye Centre
Clinical Medicine
Department of Internal medicine
Department of Neurosciences and Rehabilitation
Department of Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine
Department of General Administration
Department of Respiratory medicine, Dermatology and Allergology
BioMediTech
Computing Sciences
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-9 (2020), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2020.

Abstract

Polygenic risk scores (PRS) for breast cancer have potential to improve risk prediction, but there is limited information on their utility in various clinical situations. Here we show that among 122,978 women in the FinnGen study with 8401 breast cancer cases, the PRS modifies the breast cancer risk of two high-impact frameshift risk variants. Similarly, we show that after the breast cancer diagnosis, individuals with elevated PRS have an elevated risk of developing contralateral breast cancer, and that the PRS can considerably improve risk assessment among their female first-degree relatives. In more detail, women with the c.1592delT variant in PALB2 (242-fold enrichment in Finland, 336 carriers) and an average PRS (10–90th percentile) have a lifetime risk of breast cancer at 55% (95% CI 49–61%), which increases to 84% (71–97%) with a high PRS ( > 90th percentile), and decreases to 49% (30–68%) with a low PRS (<br />Identifying women at high risk of breast cancer has important implications for screening. Here, the authors demonstrate that polygenic risk scores improve breast cancer risk prediction in the population, in women with mutations in high-risk genes and in women with close relatives with the disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a86da671441d40374cb388914b3a90af