Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0376358 (
prostate cancer
)
59,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-seven families with four or more cases of breast cancer or breast and ovarian cancer were analyzed for mutations in BRCA1. Twelve different germ-line mutations, four novel and eight previously observed, were detected in 16 families. Five families of Ashkenazi Jewish descent carried the 185delAG mutation and shared the same haplotype at eight polymorphic markers spanning approximately 850 kb at BRCA1. Expressivity of 185delAG in these families varied, from early-onset breast cancer without ovarian cancer. Mutation 4184delTCAA occurred independently in two families. In one family, penetrance was complete, with females developing early-onset breast cancer or ovarian cancer and the male carrier developing
prostatic cancer
, whereas, in the other family, penetrance was incomplete and only breast cancer occurred, diagnosed at ages 38-81 years. Two novel nonsense mutations led to the loss of mutant BRCA1 transcript in families with 10 and 6 cases of early-onset breast cancer and ovarian cancer. A 665-nt segment of the BRCA1 3'-UTR and 1.3 kb of genomic sequence including the putative promoter region were invariant by single-strand conformation analysis in 13 families without coding-sequence mutations. Overall in our series, BRCA1 mutations have been detected in 26 families: 16 with positive BRCA1 lod scores, 7 with negative lod scores (reflecting multiple sporadic breast cancers), and 3 not tested for linkage. Three other families have positive lod scores for linkage to
BRCA2
, but 13 families without detected BRCA1 mutations have negative lod scores for both BRCA1 and
BRCA2
.
...
PMID:Novel inherited mutations and variable expressivity of BRCA1 alleles, including the founder mutation 185delAG in Ashkenazi Jewish families. 853 57
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) involving the long arm of chromosome 13 has been reported to occur in as many as one third of primary prostate cancers. Candidate tumor suppressor genes on 13q that may be important in the development of
prostate cancer
include the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene (RBI) and a gene associated with inherited breast cancer (
BRCA2
). To define the pattern of allelic loss of 13q in
prostate cancer
, LOH analysis was performed using nine mapped polymorphic markers spanning the entire chromosomal arm. Nineteen (48%) of 40
prostate cancer
cases obtained following radical prostatectomy demonstrated atllelic loss with at least one marker. Furthermore, 13 (33%) of 40 cases had evidence of allelic loss involving a region of 13q14 containing RB1. To test the hypothesis that RB1 is the targeted tumor suppressor gene in this region, 37 of 40 cases were assessed for expression of pRB, the protein product of RB1 using immunohistochemical techniques. By this analysis, 8 (22%) of 37 prostate tumors demonstrated no pRB expression. However, allelic loss at RB1, assessed with an intragenic marker, did not correlate with absent pRB expression (Fisher's exact test, P=0.375). Taken together, these data confirm that allelic loss of a common region of 13q14 occurs in approximately one third of prostate cancers. Lack of correlation of LOH at RB1 with absent pRB expression suggests the existence of another tumor suppressor gene in this region important in
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Distinct regions of allelic loss on 13q in prostate cancer. 864 Jul 74
The
BRCA2
gene on chromosome 13 has been shown to be associated with familial male and female breast cancer. Here we describe a study on
BRCA2
in 21 Icelandic families, including 9 with male breast cancer. We have previously reported linkage to the
BRCA2
region in an Icelandic male breast cancer family and subsequently found a strong indication of linkage to
BRCA2
and the same
BRCA2
haplotype in breast cancer cases from 15 additional families, indicating a common origin. We describe a five base-pair deletion in exon 9 of
BRCA2
in an affected male from the male breast cancer family. The same mutation occurs in all the families with the shared
BRCA2
haplotype indicating a founder effect. Among mutation carriers there are 12 males with breast cancer, which accounts for 40% of all males diagnosed with breast cancer in Iceland over the past 40 years. Three of them have no family history of breast cancer indicating that this mutation may have variable penetrance. The same
BRCA2
mutation appears to be associated with different cancer phenotypes in this population including male and female breast cancer,
prostate cancer
, pancreas cancer and ovarian cancer.
...
PMID:A single BRCA2 mutation in male and female breast cancer families from Iceland with varied cancer phenotypes. 867 95
Studies on Icelandic breast cancer families have shown that most of them segregate a 999del5
BRCA2
mutation. Here, we report the frequency of the 999del5
BRCA2
mutation in an Icelandic control population and four different groups of cancer patients diagnosed with (a) breast cancer; (b) ovarian cancer; (c)
prostate cancer
(patients younger than 65 years); and (d) other cancer types. The proportions of individuals carrying the mutation were 0.4% in the control population and in the patient groups 8.5%, 7.9%, 2.7%, and 1.0%, respectively. Our results indicate that
BRCA2
confers a very high risk of breast cancer and is responsible for a substantial fraction of breast and ovarian cancer in Iceland, but only a small proportion of other cancers.
...
PMID:High prevalence of the 999del5 mutation in icelandic breast and ovarian cancer patients. 870 4
We identified a large French-Canadian family with 21 cases of breast cancer, including two affected brothers. Segregation of markers from chromosome 13q in this family showed linkage to the
BRCA2
gene locus (lod = 3.67 at D13S289). A number of cancers of other types occurred in this family, including three cases of
prostate cancer
and two cases of lymphoma. The penetrance of breast cancer among
BRCA2
carriers is estimated to be 75% to the age of 70.
...
PMID:A large multisite cancer family is linked to BRCA2. 882 30
Germline mutations in
BRCA2
predispose carriers to the development of breast, ovarian, and a variety of other cancers. The original localization of the
BRCA2
gene was aided by its homozygous deletion in a pancreatic carcinoma; indeed, an excess of pancreatic carcinoma has been seen in some
BRCA2
cancer families. To determine the involvement of
BRCA2
in pancreatic carcinomas, we screened for
BRCA2
alterations in an unselected panel of 41 adenocarcinomas of the pancreas (30 pancreatic adenocarcinoma xenografts and 11 pancreatic cancer cell lines). Of the 15 (27%) that had allelic loss at the
BRCA2
locus, 4 (9.8%) had abnormalities in the second allele upon screening of the entire
BRCA2
gene by in vitro synthesized protein assay. Three of the four mutations were considered germline in origin (7.3% overall; two were confirmed in normal tissue, and one was the 6174delT mutation from the pancreatic cancer cell line CAPAN-1, for which normal tissue was unavailable). The identification of two 6174delT mutations in this series prompted us to evaluate the prevalence of this mutation in an overlapping consecutive series of 245 patients who underwent pancreatoduodenectomy for adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. Sequence analysis of this limited region of the gene identified two additional mutations: (a) one additional germline 6174delT mutation (2 of 245, 0.8% overall); and (b) a second nearby germline 6158insT mutation. One of the patients with a germline mutation had a single relative with breast cancer, and another had a single relative with
prostate cancer
. None had a family history of pancreatic cancer. The incidence of germline
BRCA2
mutations in apparently sporadic pancreatic cancer may be at least as high as in breast or ovarian cancer. Our results suggest that some familial risks for carcinoma will be evident only through a population-based application of gene screening techniques because a low disease penetrance of the germline mutations in some families often evades clinical suspicion.
...
PMID:Germline BRCA2 gene mutations in patients with apparently sporadic pancreatic carcinomas. 896 85
The breast cancer susceptibility gene
BRCA2
on chromosome 13q12-13 has recently been identified. Germline mutations of
BRCA2
are predicted to account for approximately 35% of families with multiple case, early onset female breast cancer, and they are also associated with an increased risk of male breast cancer, ovarian cancer,
prostate cancer
and pancreatic cancer. Germline mutations of a second cancer susceptibility gene BRCA1 (ref. 5), are associated with a strong predisposition to ovarian cancer as well as female breast cancer. Recent studies have suggested that the phenotype in BRCA1 families with respect to the ratio of breast to ovarian cancer varies with the location of the BRCA1 mutation. To determine whether germline mutations in
BRCA2
are associated with a similar variation in phenotypic risk, we have analysed the distribution of mutations in 25 families with multiple cases of breast and/or ovarian cancer ascertained in the United Kingdom and Eire. These mutations all lead to premature truncation of
BRCA2
as a result of frameshift deletions/insertions or nonsense mutations. Analysis of the mutation distribution along the length of the gene indicates a significant genotype-phenotype correlation. Truncating mutations in families with the highest risk of ovarian cancer relative to breast cancer are clustered in a region of approximately 3.3 kb in exon 11 (P = 0.0004). Published data on mutations in 45 other
BRCA2
-linked families provide support for this correlation.
...
PMID:Variation of risks of breast and ovarian cancer associated with different germline mutations of the BRCA2 gene. 898 79
Two cancer susceptibility genes, BRCA1 on chromosome 17q12-21 and
BRCA2
on chromosome 13q12-13, are thought to be responsible for approximately 80% of families containing multiple cases of early-onset female breast cancer. Germline mutations of BRCA1 are also associated with ovarian cancer and mutations of
BRCA2
are associated with an increased risk of male breast cancer, ovarian cancer,
prostate cancer
and pancreatic cancer. The recent isolation of both genes should make possible the identification of the genetic defect that predisposes affected individuals to breast and ovarian cancer and might lead to the use of genetic information for predictive testing.
...
PMID:Mutations of the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and the possibilities for predictive testing. 913 30
The penetrance of the
BRCA2
gene on chromosome 13q12-13 has been estimated in two large, systematically ascertained, linked families, by use of a maximum-likelihood method to incorporate both cancer-incidence data and 13q marker typings in the families. The cumulative risk of breast cancer in female gene carriers was estimated to be 59.8% by age 50 years (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 25.9%-78.5%) and 79.5% by age 70 years (95% CI 28.9%-97.5%). The cumulative risk of breast cancer in male carriers was estimated to be 6.3% (95% CI 1.4%-25.6%) by age 70 years. There was no evidence of any risk difference between the two families. These results indicate that the lifetime breast cancer risk in
BRCA2
carriers, for at least a subset of mutations, is comparable to that for BRCA1. A significant excess of ovarian cancer in gene carriers was observed (relative risk 17.69, based on three cases), but the absolute risk of ovarian cancer was less than that reported for BRCA1. Significant excesses of laryngeal cancer (relative risk 7.67, based on two possible carriers) and
prostate cancer
(relative risk 2.89, based on five possible carriers) were also observed. One case of ocular melanoma, as well as a second eye cancer of unspecified histology, occurred in obligate gene carriers.
...
PMID:Cancer risks in two large breast cancer families linked to BRCA2 on chromosome 13q12-13. 924 92
Molecular genetic analysis of
prostate cancer
has gained considerable attention in recent years. The hope is to find genetic markers that can help to determine which patients are likely to develop a progressive or lethal disease and would therefore benefit from early treatment. The
BRCA2
gene on chromosome 13 has been associated with familial male and female breast cancer. A founder mutation in this gene has been detected in the Icelandic population. This is a 5-bp deletion that leads to an early termination and truncated protein. Clustering of prostate cancers in some of the Icelandic
BRCA2
families implies that mutation carriers are at increased risk of developing cancer of the prostate. The aim of the study was to investigate this mutation in Icelandic
prostate cancer
patients related to
BRCA2
positive breast cancer probands and to estimate the prevalence of this mutation in unselected
prostate cancer
patients. To examine the potential role of this mutation in
prostate cancer
we analyzed
prostate cancer
cases from 16
BRCA2
families and all available samples from individuals diagnosed with
prostate cancer
in Iceland over a period of 1 year. The risk ratio of
prostate cancer
was 4.6 (1.9-8.8) in first-degree relatives and 2.5 (1.2-4.6) in second-degree relatives of the 16
BRCA2
positive breast cancer probands. Of 26
prostate cancer
cases found in these families 12 were analyzed, and 8 of these (66.7%) had the
BRCA2
mutation. All of these patients developed an advanced disease, and all have died of
prostate cancer
(median survival 22.5 months). Among unselected cases 3.1% (2/65) had the mutation and developed an advanced disease as well. This specific mutation in the
BRCA2
gene is found in a subset of Icelandic
prostate cancer
cases and appears to be a marker for poor prognosis.
...
PMID:BRCA2 mutation in Icelandic prostate cancer patients. 938
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>