Gender disparity: Overlooking hereditary prostate cancer.

2017 
85Background: Prostate cancer (PC) has been associated with germline mutations in several genes, most often BRCA2. Recently, 11.8% of men with metastatic PC were found to have germline mutations in BRCA and other DNA-repair genes. These mutations are equally inherited by men and women, both have elevated cancer risks, and National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) testing and management guidelines exist for male and female carriers. Despite this, over 95% of patients who have hereditary cancer multi-gene panel testing (MGPT) are women. We sought to describe detection rate and mutation spectrum of MGPT in men with PC compared to women with breast cancer (BC). Methods: Test results were reviewed for PC patients and female BC patients who had MGPT (Jun 2013 – May 2016) for up to 49 genes. Clinical history was obtained from test request forms. Results: Of 654 PC probands, 100 germline mutations were identified in 93 men (14.2%), significantly more than women with BC (8.6%; 6,215/71,728; p = 2.5e-5). Most mu...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []