Breast Cancer Research

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Commentary

Are BRCA1- and BRCA2-related breast cancers associated with increased mortality?

D Gareth Evans1* and Anthony Howell2

Author Affiliations

1 Academic Unit of Medical Genetics and Regional Genetics Service, St Mary's Hospital, Manchester, UK

2 Department of Medical Oncology, Christie Hospital, Manchester, UK

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Breast Cancer Res 2004, 6:E7 doi:10.1186/bcr748


See related Research article: http://breast-cancer-research.com/content/6/1/R8

Published: 25 November 2003

Abstract

There has been contradictory evidence as to whether BRCA1 associated breast cancers have a poorer prognosis than non-BRCA1 cancers. In this issue of Breast Cancer Research Robson and colleagues provide further evidence for poorer survival in BRCA1 carriers and show that it could be attributed to failure to treat small node-negative grade 3 breast cancers with chemotherapy. There still remains little evidence for a survival difference for BRCA2 related breast cancers. Although the high contralateral breast cancer risk is confirmed by this study there is no real evidence for an increase in ipsilateral recurrence or new primary breast cancers in mutation carriers up to the 10-year point.

Keywords:
BRCA1; BRCA2; breast cancer; ipsilateral; survival