These findings, from the large Women's Health Initiative, reinforce
the results of a 1994 study in the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute, the authors write.
“This is not the first study to examine this relationship, but it is
one of the larger to date, if not the largest study,” said lead
author Jennifer L. Beebe-Dimmer of Karmanos Cancer Institute in
Detroit.
Cancer is a disease of the DNA, she said, and family clustering
indicates that breast and prostate cancers may have genes in common,
Beebe-Dimmer and her colleagues used data for more than 78,000 women
in the Women’s Health Initiative who were over age 50 and
cancer-free when the study began in 1993. At the start they had
comprehensive physical exams and gave detailed personal and family
medical histories.
Most women remained in the study for more than 10 years.
By 2009 there had been 3,506 new breast cancers in the original
group.
Overall, more than 11,000 women had a first-degree relative –
mother, sister or daughter - with breast cancer, and this was more
common for those who were eventually diagnosed themselves. Twenty
percent of women with breast cancer had first-degree relatives with
the disease, compared to nearly 15 percent of those who did not
develop breast cancer.
There was a similar, but very slight, association with prostate
cancer, the researchers reported in Cancer.
More than 11 percent of women who developed breast cancer reported a
first-degree relative with prostate cancer, compared to about 10
percent of women without the disease. Having a father, brother or
son with prostate cancer increased the risk of breast cancer by
about 14 percent.
Compared to women with no family history of breast or prostate
cancer, those with a family history of both were 80 percent more
likely to develop breast cancer, the authors found.
“We know that the major breast cancer susceptibility genes BRCA1 and
BRCA2 are also linked to prostate cancer,” Beebe-Dimmer told Reuters
Health by email. That may explain some of the clustering, she said.
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Researchers have been reporting on familial links between breast and
prostate cancer for 40 years, said Mary-Claire King of the
University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, in email to
Reuters Health.
“It is good to see the link confirmed” in the Women’s Health
Initiative, said King, who was not involved in the new research.
“Both of these cancers are relatively common, so that it is possible
when cancers are diagnosed in multiple family members it may be due
to chance,” she said. “It may also be an exposure to something in
the environment.”
The decision to increase breast cancer screening will depend on how
many male relatives have been diagnosed with prostate cancer and at
what age, she said, with more diagnoses at young ages being
particularly telling.
“Knowledge of breast cancer family history is still extremely
important,” Beebe-Dimmer said. She would not recommend BRCA1 or 2
genetic testing for women with a family history of prostate cancer
but no history of breast or ovarian cancer.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Hnm1x6
Cancer, online March 9, 2015.
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