Study: Among women with breast cancer, who should have genetic testing for an inherited mutation?
Which breast cancer patients should consider genetic testing? Knowing whether you have an inherited mutation may inform the decisions you and your healthcare provider make about treatment. But it can also increase stress and anxiety. This XRAY reviews a study of how different guidelines affect genetic testing recommendations for people with breast cancer. (8/27/20)
Contents
At a glance | Clinical trials |
How well do different guidelines work? | Guidelines |
Strengths and limitations | Questions for your doctor |
What does this mean for me? | Resources |
STUDY AT A GLANCE
This study is about:
Which women with breast cancer should have genetic testing for inherited mutations and which guidelines best identify them.
Why is this study important?
Knowing whether or not you have an can help you, your family and your healthcare team make treatment and prevention choices. Testing can also clarify risk for additional cancers and cancer risk for family members.
Study findings:
The 3,907 participants in this study were women with breast cancer who were seen at Mayo Clinic from May 2000 to May 2016, and who agreed to participate in the registry for the Mayo Clinic Breast Cancer Study (MCBCS). All women diagnosed with a first invasive breast cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ were eligible for this registry.
Among the participants:
241 (6.2%) had a mutation in one of 9 known and actionable breast cancer genes (, , , , , , , and ). Recommendations for healthcare treatment or surveillance are different for women with mutations in these genes than for the general population.
How well do different guidelines identify women with inherited mutations?
The American Society of Breast Cancer Surgeons (ASBrS)
ASBrS recommends testing for all women with breast cancer. An XRAY review of the ASBrS recommendations can be found here. Using ASBrS guidelines:
- According to these guidelines, in this study, all participants with mutations would be identified.
Pro: All women with mutations would be identified; none would be missed.
Con: 3,666 women who did not have an inherited mutation were tested, which may have caused unnecessary cost, stress and anxiety.
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)
NCCN has a complex set of guidelines for genetic testing recommendations (see guidelines below). Using current NCCN guidelines:
- 169 (4.3%) of the 3,907 participants had a genetic mutation in one of 9 actionable breast cancer genes and would qualify for genetic testing under NCCN guidelines.
- These 169 women represented 70% of 241 women with an inherited mutation.
- 72 (1.8%) participants had a mutation in one of 9 actionable breast cancer genes but did not qualify for genetic testing under NCCN criteria.
- These 72 women represented 30% of the 241 women with an inherited mutation.
Pro: Fewer women without inherited mutations were tested than under ASBrS guidelines and did not unnecessarily face the potential stress and anxiety of genetic testing.
Con: A large portion women with an inherited mutation (30%) were not identified, which prevented them from using this information to guide their treatment and surgical decisions.
The researchers evaluated the effect of expanding NCCN testing guidelines. They proposed expanding NCCN guidelines to include testing for all women diagnosed with breast cancer by age 65. This may be a better way to identify the most women with inherited mutations. It may also mean that fewer women without inherited mutations would be tested than with the ASBrS guidelines.
Expanded NCCN guidelines
Using the proposed expanded NCCN guidelines for testing all women by age 65 diagnosed with breast cancer:
- 222 (5.7%) participants who had a mutation in one of 9 actionable breast cancer genes would qualify for genetic testing.
- 92% of the 241 women with an inherited mutation would be identified by these guidelines.
- 19 (0.4%) of the 3,907 participants had a mutation in one of the 9 known and actionable breast cancer genes but would not qualify for genetic testing under these guidelines.
- 8% of the 241 women with an inherited mutation would not be identified by these guidelines.
Pro: The vast majority of women with an inherited mutation (92%) would be identified by expanding NCCN guidelines.
Con: More women without mutations would be tested than under current NCCN guidelines and face the potential stress, cost and anxiety of genetic testing unnecessarily.
The researchers suggest that their proposed expansion of current NCCN guidelines to include testing for all women with diagnosed with breast cancer by age 65 would maximize identification of women with inherited mutations and minimize testing of women without inherited mutations.
Strengths and limitations:
- The largest strength of this study is that all breast cancer patients were tested genetically. This allows direct comparison between current ASBrS, current NCCN and expanded NCCN guidelines, using the same data of the same participants.
- A major weakness of this study is that the participants studied were predominantly White women from one geographic location, which may not be representative of the general population.
What does this mean for me?
Up to 5 to 10 percent of women with breast cancer have an inherited mutation that increases their risk of breast cancer. If you have breast cancer, you may want to consider talking with a healthcare provider about whether you should consider genetic testing.
NCCN recommendations are considered the gold standard for cancer care. However, cancer healthcare professionals express different views, including those of the American Society of Breast Surgeons. The researchers of this study propose expanding the NCCN guidelines to include testing of all breast cancer patients diagnosed by age 65. Speak with your healthcare provider about what guidelines they use and how that may impact their recommendations for you.
If you have an inherited mutation, you may want to consider which surgical choice best fits your situation: for example, mastectomy, and radiation, or prophylactic mastectomy. If you have an inherited mutation, your risk of cancer in other organs may be different than that of people without an inherited mutation. Also, you may want to talk to family members about your mutation status because it may affect their risk of cancer.
If you have an inherited mutation, some treatment options may be more effective than others for you (e.g., hormone treatment or PARP inhibitors for advanced breast cancer).
If you test negative for an inherited mutation, you can make decisions that reflect your personal risk of additional cancers or recurrence.
Share your thoughts on this XRAYS article by taking our brief survey.
References
Yadav S, Hu C, Hart SN, et al. Evaluation of Genetic Testing in a Hospital-based Series of Women with Breast Cancer. March 3, 2020. Journal of Clinical Oncology 38(13):1409-1418.
Manahan ER, Kuerer HM, Sebastian M, et al. "Consensus Guidelines on Genetic Testing for Hereditary Breast Cancer from the American Society of Breast Surgeons." July 29 2019. Annals of Surgical Oncology 26(10):3025–3031.
Disclosure
FORCE receives funding from industry sponsors, including companies that manufacture cancer drugs, tests and devices. All XRAYS articles are written independently of any sponsor and are reviewed by members of our Scientific Advisory Board prior to publication to assure scientific integrity.
National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines regarding who should undergo genetic counseling and testing recommend speaking with a genetics expert about genetic testing if you have been diagnosed with breast cancer and any of the following apply to you:
- You have a blood relative who has tested positive for an inherited mutation
- You have any of the following:
- Breast cancer at age 50 or younger.
- Male breast cancer at any age.
- Ovarian cancer at any age.
- at any age.
- Two separate breast cancer diagnoses.
- Eastern European Jewish ancestry and breast cancer at any age.
- Lobular breast cancer and a family history of diffuse gastric cancer.
- breast cancer and are at high-risk for recurrence.
- Tumor testing shows a mutation in a gene that is associated with .
OR
- You have one or more close family members who have had:
- Young-onset or rare cancers.
- Breast cancer at age 50 or younger.
- Triple-negative breast cancer.
- Male breast cancer, ovarian cancer, pancreatic cancer or cancer at any age.
- Two separate cancer diagnoses.
- Metastatic prostate cancer or prostate cancer that is high-risk or very-high-risk.
The American Society of Breast Cancer Surgeons (ASBrS) released guidelines in 2019 recommending that all women diagnosed with breast cancer have access to genetic testing for inherited mutations in breast cancer genes.
If you are uncertain whether you meet the guidelines above and you are interested in or considering genetic testing, you should speak with a cancer genetics expert.
Updated: 07/28/2023
- What guidelines do you use for considering whether or not to recommend genetic testing?
- Should I consider genetic testing?
- What are the risks and benefits of genetic testing?
- How do I contact a genetic counselor?
- If I have an inherited mutation, how would that affect your recommendations for my healthcare?
- Will my insurance company pay for genetic testing?
The following clinical trials include genetic counseling and testing.
- NCT02620852: WISDOM Study: Women Informed to Screen Depending on Measures of Risk offers women ages 40-74 the opportunity to undergo risk assessment and genetic testing in order to determine the best breast screening options based on their situation.
- NCT05562778: Chatbot to maximize hereditary cancer genetic risk assessment. Researchers are testing whether a mobile health platform, known as a "chatbot" can improve rates of genetic testing among Medicaid patients with an elevated risk having an inherited mutation.
- NCT05427240: eHealth Delivery Alternative for Cancer Genetic Testing for Hereditary Cancer (eReach2). This study will look at the effectiveness of offering web-based options for pre/post-test genetic counseling to provide equal or improved timely uptake of genetic services and testing.
- NCT05694559: Connecting Black Families in Houston, Texas to Hereditary Cancer Genetic Counseling, Genetic Testing, and Cascade Testing by Using a Simple Genetic Risk Screening Tool and Telegenetics. This study will provide genetic testing to 150 Black individuals and families and provide genetic counseling and risk reduction resources to individuals with a mutation linked to increased cancer risk.
Other genetic counseling or testing studies may be found here.
Updated: 02/29/2024
The following resources can help you locate a genetics expert near you or via telehealth.
Finding genetics experts
- The National Society of Genetic Counselors website has a search tool for finding a genetic counselor by specialty and location or via telehealth.
- InformedDNA is a network of board-certified genetic counselors providing this service by telephone. They can also help you find a qualified expert in your area for face-to-face genetic counseling if that is your preference.
- Gene-Screen is a third-party genetic counseling group that can help educate, support and order testing for patients and their families.
- JScreen is a national program from Emory University that provides low-cost at-home genetic counseling and testing with financial assistance available.
- Grey Genetics provides access to genetic counselors who offer genetic counseling by telephone.
- The Genetic Support Foundation offers genetic counseling with board-certified genetic counselors.
Related experts
Genetics clinics
- The American College of Medical Genetics website has a tool to find genetics clinics by location and specialty.
Other ways to find experts
- Register for the FORCE Message Boards and post on the Find a Specialist board to connect with other people who share your situation.
- The National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated comprehensive cancer centers have genetic counselors who specialize in cancer.
- FORCE's toll-free helpline (866-288-RISK, ext. 704) will connect you with a volunteer board-certified genetic counselor who can help you find a genetics expert near you.
Updated: 07/21/2023
Who covered this study?
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