Rates of Jewish ancestral mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 in borderline ovarian tumors

Walter H. Gotlieb*, Eitan Friedman, Revital Bruchim Bar-Sade, Anna Kruglikova, Galit Hirsh-Yechezkel, Baruch Modan, Moshe Inbar, Ben Davidson, Juri Kopolovic, Ilya Novikov, Gilad Ben-Baruch

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

50 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Germline mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are known to be associated with an increased risk of breast and epithelial ovarian cancers. Two specific mutations, 185delAG-BRCA1 and 6174delT-BRCA2, have been detected in a substantial proportion (20%-60%) of unselected Ashkenazi Jewish - patients i.e., Jewish patients of Eastern/Northern European descent-with invasive ovarian cancer and in a measurable proportion (2%) of the general Ashkenazi Jewish population. However, uncertainty exists concerning the heritable basis of borderline ovarian tumors and whether these tumors represent an early form of ultimately invasive disease. To gain insight into these issues, we determined the rates of 185delAG-BRCA1 and 6174delT-BRCA2 mutations in patients with borderline ovarian tumors. Methods: Analysis of 185delAG-BRCA1 and 6174delT-BRCA2 germline mutations was performed by use of a heteroduplex formation assay in samples from 46 consecutive patients with borderline ovarian tumors and 59 consecutive patients with invasive epithelial ovarian cancers. Forty-eight samples were also analyzed by restriction enzyme analysis for the presence of the 5382insC-BRCA1 mutation, a mutation detected in 2.2% of Ashkenazi Jewish patients with breast, but not ovarian, cancer. Results: One (2.2%) of the 46 patient with borderline tumors was identified as a carrier of the 185delAG-BRCA1 mutation, and no patients were found to carry the 6174delT-BRCA2 mutation. Nineteen (32%) of the 59 patients with invasive ovarian cancer were found to carry one of these two mutations; 17 carried 185delAG-BRCA1 and two carried 6174delT-BRCA2 (χ2 test with continuity correction, P = .00028). None of the patients analyzed for 5382insC-BRCA1 were found to carry the mutation. In one high-risk family that included 185delAG-BRCA1 carriers, a single patient with stage IIIc borderline ovarian tumor did not carry the mutation. Conclusions: Invasive epithelial and borderline ovarian tumors appear to differ in their genetic predisposition and in the molecular mechanisms underlying their genesis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)995-1000
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of the National Cancer Institute
Volume90
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jul 1998

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