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Questionnaire
Helps
Determine Breast Cancer Risk
A questionnaire that identifies women at risk of
inherited breast or ovarian cancer can help pinpoint those who
may need further screening and preventive treatment, researchers
report.
The questionnaire, filled out by women coming to the hospital
for mammograms, may also allow earlier diagnosis of cancer, concludes
the study, published in the November issue of Cancer.
The eight-month study included about 14,000 women who came to
the Massachusetts General Hospital's Avon Breast Evaluation Center
in Boston. The women completed a questionnaire on their family
history of breast or ovarian cancer, whether they had developed
any tumors, and other related factors.
The information was then downloaded into a database available
to the patients' doctors. The data was analyzed in order to evaluate
cancer risk among women who carried mutations in the so-called
breast cancer genes -- BRCA1 or BRCA2.
Among the 1,764 study volunteers who had been diagnosed with
breast or ovarian cancer, 20.6 percent had family histories that
indicated an elevated risk of one of the tumor-associated mutations
in BRCA1 or BRCA2, the researchers found.
"We wanted to show we could identify these high-risk women with
an automated system that provides accurate information without
requiring more work for our staff, an approach that has been tried
in very few centers worldwide," study senior author Dr. Kevin
Hughes of the MGH Surgical Oncology Division, said in a prepared
statement.
"In addition to verifying the utility of this strategy, these
results remind us how many women who should be tested for these
genetic mutations are not being screened," Hughes said.
Reference
Source 101
September
26, 2005
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