ACTIONABILITY KNOWLEDGE REPOSITORY ACTIONABILITY CURATION INTERFACE

Adult Summary Report Secondary Findings in Adult Subjects Non-diagnostic, excludes newborn screening & prenatal testing/screening A Current Version Rule-Out Dashboard Release History Status (Adult): Passed (Consensus scoring is Complete) Curation Status (Adult): Released 1.1.6 Status (Pediatric): Incomplete (Consensus scoring is Incomplete) P

GENE/GENE PANEL: BRCA1, BRCA2
Condition: Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer
Mode(s) of Inheritance: Autosomal Dominant
Actionability Assertion
Gene Condition Pairs(s)
Final Assertion
BRCA10011450 (breast-ovarian cancer, familial, susceptibility to, 1)
Definitive Actionability
BRCA20012933 (breast-ovarian cancer, familial, susceptibility to, 2)
Definitive Actionability
Actionability Rationale
All experts agreed with an assertion of definitive, based on strong evidence of actionability and meeting the following criteria: penetrance evidence from an unselected population, effectiveness evidence from the exact population and based on a direct impact of the intervention on the outcome. This topic has been assigned as assertion of definitive. Thus, this topic will not be updated unless it is renominated because of new evidence which could change the assertion.
Final Consensus Scoresa
Outcome / Intervention Pair
Severity
Likelihood
Effectiveness
Nature of the
Intervention
Total
Score
Gene Condition Pairs: BRCA1 0011450 (OMIM:604370) BRCA2 0012933 (OMIM:612555)
Breast Cancer (BRCA1) / Surveillance
2
3A
2A
3
10AA
Breast Cancer (BRCA1) / Mastectomy
2
3A
3A
1
9AA
Ovarian Cancer (BRCA1) / Oophorectomy
2
2A
3A
1
8AA
Breast Cancer (BRCA2) / Surveillance
2
3A
2A
3
10AA
Breast Cancer (BRCA2) / Mastectomy
2
3A
3A
1
9AA
Ovarian Cancer (BRCA2) / Oophorectomy
2
2A
3A
1
8AA

 
Topic
Narrative Description of Evidence
Ref
1. What is the nature of the threat to health for an individual carrying a deleterious allele?
Prevalence of the Genetic Condition
For women, lifetime risk estimates indicate that 12.3% will develop breast cancer and 2.8% will die from it, while 1.4% will develop ovarian cancer and 1% will die from it. Among these breast and ovarian cancer cases, BRCA mutations have a prevalence of 3% and 10%, respectively.
1 2
Clinical Features
(Signs / symptoms)
BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations are associated with increased risks of breast, ovarian, fallopian tube, and primary peritoneal cancers in women. These mutations are also associated with breast cancer and, to a lesser extent, prostate cancer, in males. Both sexes may also be at an increased risk of pancreatic cancer. BRCA mutations are associated with a strong family history of breast and ovarian cancers and are found more frequently in the Ashkenazi Jewish population.
1 3
Natural History
(Important subgroups & survival / recovery)
BRCA-related breast and ovarian cancers occur at a younger age, typically prior to age 50, and breast cancers are more likely to be “triple-negative” (i.e. estrogen and progesterone receptor and HER2 negative). Compared to non-carriers with breast cancer, BRCA1 mutation carriers have significantly decreased overall survival rates both in the short- and long-term, though similar association was not detected for BRCA2 mutation carriers.
1 3
2. How effective are interventions for preventing harm?
Information on the effectiveness of the recommendations below was not provided unless otherwise stated.
Patient Management
The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) has developed an ACT sheet to help clinical decision-making when BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 pathogenic variant(s) have been identified as a secondary finding: http://www.acmg.net/ACMG/UploadedPDFS/PDFDocuments/Hereditary-Breast-and-Ovarian-Cancer-ACT-Sheet.aspx
 
Chemoprevention medications (e.g. tamoxifen, raloxifene) have been shown to reduce the incidence of breast cancer in high-risk women in the general population, but their effectiveness has not been assessed in the context of BRCA mutations. (Tier 1)
1 4 5
Prophylactic surgery (e.g. bilateral mastectomy or salpingo-oophorectomy) has been shown to substantially reduce the risk for breast or ovarian cancer in both high-risk women and those who are BRCA mutation carriers. Breast cancer risk was reduced by 85-100% with mastectomy and by 37% to 100% with oophorectomy. Ovarian cancer risk was reduced by 69-100% with oophorectomy. Breast cancer-specific mortality was reduced by 81-100% after mastectomy and all-cause mortality was reduced by 55-100% after oophorectomy. (Tier 1)
1 4 6
Surveillance
More frequent and intensive breast cancer screening, including clinical breast exams, mammography, and MRI starting at age 25. However, no screening methods have been shown to be effective at reducing breast cancer incidence among BRCA mutation carriers. (Tier 1)
1 4 5
Screening methods for ovarian cancer have not been shown to be effective among women with BRCA mutations; however, annual gynecological exam, vaginal ultrasonography, and serum 125 (CA-125) can be used for screening. (Tier 1)
7
Male carriers are recommended to have an annual breast exam. Information on effectiveness was not provided. (Tier 2)
8
Circumstances to Avoid
Oral contraceptive use has been shown to be protective against ovarian cancer. However, some studies have suggested that oral contraceptive use increases the risk of breast cancer in women with BRCA mutations, though this effect has not been consistently demonstrated. (Tier 2)
8 9
3. What is the chance that this threat will materialize?
Mode of Inheritance
Autosomal Dominant
 
Prevalence of Genetic Variants
BRCA mutations have an estimated 0.2-0.3% prevalence in the general population and 2.1% among women with Ashkenazi Jewish heritage. (Tier 1)
1
Penetrance
(Include any high risk racial or ethnic subgroups)
Clinically significant mutations in BRCA1 are associated with a 46-57% risk of breast cancer and 40% risk of ovarian cancer by age 70. BRCA2 mutations are associated with a 50% risk of breast cancer and almost 20% risk of ovarian cancer by age 70. (Tier 1)
1 10
Relative Risk
(Include any high risk racial or ethnic subgroups)
Information on relative risk was unavailable.
 
 
Expressivity
The pathologic and clinical characteristics of tumors can differ by the type of mutation, including progression and variability in estrogen, progesterone, and human epidermal growth factor receptor status. (Tier 3)
1
4. What is the Nature of the Intervention?
Nature of Intervention
The interventions identified in this report include prophylactic surgery to remove target organs, invasive screening tests, and medications with potential side effects.
 
5. Would the underlying risk or condition escape detection prior to harm in the setting of recommended care?
Chance to Escape Clinical Detection
Current screening procedures for women of average risk are not likely to detect breast and ovarian cancer at an early enough stage to cure the disease. The age at onset of breast cancer is typically prior to age 50, before the start of typical surveillance among average risk populations. Ovarian cancer is typically metastatic when diagnosed, thus risk-reducing BSO bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy is currently the only effective strategy to reduce the risk of dying from ovarian cancer. (Tier 1)
1 4
Description of sources of evidence:
Tier 1: Evidence from a systematic review, or a meta-analysis or clinical practice guideline clearly based on a systematic review.
Tier 2: Evidence from clinical practice guidelines or broad-based expert consensus with non-systematic evidence review.
Tier 3: Evidence from another source with non-systematic review of evidence with primary literature cited.
Tier 4: Evidence from another source with non-systematic review of evidence with no citations to primary data sources.
Tier 5: Evidence from a non-systematically identified source.

 
Gene Condition Associations
Gene
Condition Associations
OMIM Identifier
Primary MONDO Identifier
Additional MONDO Identifiers
Reference List
1. Nelson HD, Rongwei F, Goddard K, Mitchell JP, Okinaka-Hu L, Pappas M, Zakher B. Risk Assessment, Genetic Couseling, And Genetic Testing for BRCA-Related Cancer Systematic Review to Update the U.S. Preventive Servicies Task Force Recommendation.. (2013) Website: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK179201/
2. Daly MB, Axilbund JE, Buys SS, Crawford B, Friendman S, Garber JE, et al. Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment Breast and Ovarian. National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCC). (2013) Website: https://education.nccn.org/node/78021
3. Lee EH, Park SK, Park B, Kim SW, Lee MH, Ahn SH, Son BH, Yoo KY, Kang D. Effect of BRCA1/2 mutation on short-term and long-term breast cancer survival: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Breast Cancer Res Treat. (2010) 122(1):11-25.
4. Moyer VA. Risk assessment, genetic counseling, and genetic testing for BRCA-related cancer in women: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med. (2014) 160(4):271-81.
5. Classification and care of people at risk of familial breast cancer and management of breast cancer and related risks in people with a family history of breast cancer. NICE. (2013) Website: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg164
6. Management of early breast cancer. Wellington (NZ) New Zealand Guidelines Group. Other. (2009) Website: https://www.health.govt.nz/system/files/documents/publications/mgmt-of-early-breast-cancer-aug09.pdf
7. Ovarian carcinoma.. Other. (2009) Website: https://www.guidelinecentral.com/summaries/ovarian-carcinoma/
8. Risk reduction and surveillance strategies for individuals at high genetic risk for breast and ovarian cancer. Other. (2011) Website: https://www.guideline.gov/content.aspx?id=38601
9. Use of hormonal contraception in women with coexisting medical conditions. Other. (2006) Website: https://www.guideline.gov/content.aspx?id=10924
10. Chen S, Parmigiani G. Meta-analysis of BRCA1 and BRCA2 penetrance. J Clin Oncol. (2007) 25(11):1329-33.
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