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Breast and prostate cancer risk: The interplay of polygenic risk, rare pathogenic germline variants, and family history.

Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

Authors: Emadeldin Hassanin, Patrick May, Rana Aldisi, Isabel Spier, Andreas J Forstner, Markus M Nöthen, Stefan Aretz, Peter Krawitz, Dheeraj Reddy Bobbili, Carlo Maj

PURPOSE: We aimed to investigate to what extent polygenic risk scores (PRS), rare pathogenic germline variants (PVs), and family history jointly influence breast cancer and prostate cancer risk.

METHODS: A total of 200,643 individuals from the UK Biobank were categorized as follows: (1) heterozygotes or nonheterozygotes for PVs in moderate to high-risk cancer genes, (2) PRS strata, and (3) with or without a family history of cancer. Multivariable logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards models were used to compute the odds ratio across groups and the cumulative incidence through life.

RESULTS: Cumulative incidence by age 70 years among the nonheterozygotes across PRS strata ranged from 9% to 32% and from 9% to 35% for breast cancer and prostate cancer, respectively. Among the PV heterozygotes it ranged from 20% to 48% in moderate-risk genes and from 51% to 74% in high-risk genes for breast cancer, and it ranged from 30% to 59% in prostate cancer risk genes. Family history was always associated with an increased cancer odds ratio.

CONCLUSION: PRS alone provides a meaningful risk gradient leading to a cancer risk stratification comparable to PVs in moderate risk genes, whereas acts as a risk modifier when considering high-risk genes. Including family history along with PV and PRS further improves cancer risk stratification.

Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PMID: 34906469

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