Study provides individual risk estimates for stomach cancer
Study provides individual risk estimates for deadly hereditary stomach cancer
A University of Otago researcher who helped discover a key genetic mutation that causes familial stomach cancer is part of an international team that has now provided the first accurate risk estimates for those who carry it.
Otago’s Professor Parry Guilford is a co-author of a new Canadian-led study providing data that will allow genetic counselors to help families around the world carrying mutations in the E-cadherin gene (CDH1) to determine which cancer risk reducing options are right for them.
Hereditary
diffuse gastric cancer is a rare condition that can result
in aggressive, early-onset cancers of the stomach and breast
across several generations of a family.
To establish the risk estimates researchers undertook a detailed analysis of 75 families with a strong family history of the deadly cancer, including a Bay of Plenty whanau who lost 25 members to the disease within the space of 30 years.
The study, appearing in the US journal JAMA Oncology, reports the following cancer risk estimates for individuals with a CDH1 genetic mutation:
· 70% risk for men
(stomach cancer)
· 56% risk for women (stomach
cancer)
· 42% risk of lobular breast cancer for
women
Lobular breast cancer is harder to detect by mammography than other forms of breast cancer, often delaying its diagnosis.
Professor Guilford says the new study will help better inform whether or not preventative surgery, such as removal of the stomach or mastectomies, is the best treatment option for those carrying a CDH1 gene mutation.
“The scale of this
study, and its international breadth, highlights how
hundreds of people from around the world have had their
lives saved thanks to the determination of the Maori stomach
cancer families to tackle the problem head on,” he
says.
The study also shed light on what is causing gastric cancers in 60 per cent of families with multiple gastric cancers but no CDH1 mutations by identifying other genes that may predispose individuals to this deadly disease.
This work has led to a global collaborative
effort to look at these genes in conjunction with CDH1 to
uncover the disease-causing mutations in a broader number of
families.
Professor Guilford and his team at the University’s Centre for Translational Cancer Research are continuing their research into Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer. Their work includes developing drugs to be used for the prevention of gastric and breast cancer in these high risk families, thereby providing the means to delay or avoid major surgery at a young age.
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