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Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)

SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study reports the management of women at high risk for breast cancer over a 33 years period. The aim was to summarize the numbers seen and to report the results of our studies on gene testing, the outcomes of screening and the success of preventive methods including lifestyle ch...

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Autores principales: Howell, Anthony, Gandhi, Ashu, Howell, Sacha, Wilson, Mary, Maxwell, Anthony, Astley, Susan, Harvie, Michelle, Pegington, Mary, Barr, Lester, Baildam, Andrew, Harkness, Elaine, Hopwood, Penelope, Wisely, Julie, Wilding, Andrea, Greenhalgh, Rosemary, Affen, Jenny, Maurice, Andrew, Cole, Sally, Wiseman, Julia, Lalloo, Fiona, French, David P., Evans, D. Gareth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7763143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33317064
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12123697
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author Howell, Anthony
Gandhi, Ashu
Howell, Sacha
Wilson, Mary
Maxwell, Anthony
Astley, Susan
Harvie, Michelle
Pegington, Mary
Barr, Lester
Baildam, Andrew
Harkness, Elaine
Hopwood, Penelope
Wisely, Julie
Wilding, Andrea
Greenhalgh, Rosemary
Affen, Jenny
Maurice, Andrew
Cole, Sally
Wiseman, Julia
Lalloo, Fiona
French, David P.
Evans, D. Gareth
author_facet Howell, Anthony
Gandhi, Ashu
Howell, Sacha
Wilson, Mary
Maxwell, Anthony
Astley, Susan
Harvie, Michelle
Pegington, Mary
Barr, Lester
Baildam, Andrew
Harkness, Elaine
Hopwood, Penelope
Wisely, Julie
Wilding, Andrea
Greenhalgh, Rosemary
Affen, Jenny
Maurice, Andrew
Cole, Sally
Wiseman, Julia
Lalloo, Fiona
French, David P.
Evans, D. Gareth
author_sort Howell, Anthony
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study reports the management of women at high risk for breast cancer over a 33 years period. The aim was to summarize the numbers seen and to report the results of our studies on gene testing, the outcomes of screening and the success of preventive methods including lifestyle change, chemoprevention and risk-reducing mastectomy. We also discuss how the clinical Family History Service may be improved in the future. ABSTRACT: Clinics for women concerned about their family history of breast cancer are widely established. A Family History Clinic was set-up in Manchester, UK, in 1987 in a Breast Unit serving a population of 1.8 million. In this review, we report the outcome of risk assessment, screening and prevention strategies in the clinic and propose future approaches. Between 1987–2020, 14,311 women were referred, of whom 6.4% were from known gene families, 38.2% were at high risk (≥30% lifetime risk), 37.7% at moderate risk (17–29%), and 17.7% at an average/population risk who were discharged. A total of 4168 (29.1%) women were eligible for genetic testing and 736 carried pathogenic variants, predominantly in BRCA1 and BRCA2 but also other genes (5.1% of direct referrals). All women at high or moderate risk were offered annual mammographic screening between ages 30 and 40 years old: 646 cancers were detected in women at high and moderate risk (5.5%) with a detection rate of 5 per 1000 screens. Incident breast cancers were largely of good prognosis and resulted in a predicted survival advantage. All high/moderate-risk women were offered lifestyle prevention advice and 14–27% entered various lifestyle studies. From 1992–2003, women were offered entry into IBIS-I (tamoxifen) and IBIS-II (anastrozole) trials (12.5% of invitees joined). The NICE guidelines ratified the use of tamoxifen and raloxifene (2013) and subsequently anastrozole (2017) for prevention; 10.8% women took up the offer of such treatment between 2013–2020. Since 1994, 7164 eligible women at ≥25% lifetime risk of breast cancer were offered a discussion of risk-reducing breast surgery and 451 (6.2%) had surgery. New approaches in all aspects of the service are needed to build on these results.
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spelling pubmed-77631432020-12-27 Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020) Howell, Anthony Gandhi, Ashu Howell, Sacha Wilson, Mary Maxwell, Anthony Astley, Susan Harvie, Michelle Pegington, Mary Barr, Lester Baildam, Andrew Harkness, Elaine Hopwood, Penelope Wisely, Julie Wilding, Andrea Greenhalgh, Rosemary Affen, Jenny Maurice, Andrew Cole, Sally Wiseman, Julia Lalloo, Fiona French, David P. Evans, D. Gareth Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: This study reports the management of women at high risk for breast cancer over a 33 years period. The aim was to summarize the numbers seen and to report the results of our studies on gene testing, the outcomes of screening and the success of preventive methods including lifestyle change, chemoprevention and risk-reducing mastectomy. We also discuss how the clinical Family History Service may be improved in the future. ABSTRACT: Clinics for women concerned about their family history of breast cancer are widely established. A Family History Clinic was set-up in Manchester, UK, in 1987 in a Breast Unit serving a population of 1.8 million. In this review, we report the outcome of risk assessment, screening and prevention strategies in the clinic and propose future approaches. Between 1987–2020, 14,311 women were referred, of whom 6.4% were from known gene families, 38.2% were at high risk (≥30% lifetime risk), 37.7% at moderate risk (17–29%), and 17.7% at an average/population risk who were discharged. A total of 4168 (29.1%) women were eligible for genetic testing and 736 carried pathogenic variants, predominantly in BRCA1 and BRCA2 but also other genes (5.1% of direct referrals). All women at high or moderate risk were offered annual mammographic screening between ages 30 and 40 years old: 646 cancers were detected in women at high and moderate risk (5.5%) with a detection rate of 5 per 1000 screens. Incident breast cancers were largely of good prognosis and resulted in a predicted survival advantage. All high/moderate-risk women were offered lifestyle prevention advice and 14–27% entered various lifestyle studies. From 1992–2003, women were offered entry into IBIS-I (tamoxifen) and IBIS-II (anastrozole) trials (12.5% of invitees joined). The NICE guidelines ratified the use of tamoxifen and raloxifene (2013) and subsequently anastrozole (2017) for prevention; 10.8% women took up the offer of such treatment between 2013–2020. Since 1994, 7164 eligible women at ≥25% lifetime risk of breast cancer were offered a discussion of risk-reducing breast surgery and 451 (6.2%) had surgery. New approaches in all aspects of the service are needed to build on these results. MDPI 2020-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7763143/ /pubmed/33317064 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12123697 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Howell, Anthony
Gandhi, Ashu
Howell, Sacha
Wilson, Mary
Maxwell, Anthony
Astley, Susan
Harvie, Michelle
Pegington, Mary
Barr, Lester
Baildam, Andrew
Harkness, Elaine
Hopwood, Penelope
Wisely, Julie
Wilding, Andrea
Greenhalgh, Rosemary
Affen, Jenny
Maurice, Andrew
Cole, Sally
Wiseman, Julia
Lalloo, Fiona
French, David P.
Evans, D. Gareth
Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)
title Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)
title_full Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)
title_fullStr Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)
title_full_unstemmed Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)
title_short Long-Term Evaluation of Women Referred to a Breast Cancer Family History Clinic (Manchester UK 1987–2020)
title_sort long-term evaluation of women referred to a breast cancer family history clinic (manchester uk 1987–2020)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7763143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33317064
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers12123697
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