Our analysis of middle-aged hereditary retinoblastoma survivors suggests that these individuals have an excess risk of epithelial cancer. Lifelong follow-up studies are needed to evaluate the full spectrum of subsequent cancer risk in hereditary retinoblastoma survivors.
We found that the protective effects of tubal ligation on ovarian cancer risk were subtype-specific. These findings provide insights into distinct aetiologies of ovarian cancer subtypes and mechanisms underlying the protective effects of tubal ligation.
Genetic variation at the TERT-CLPTM1L locus at 5p15.33 is associated with susceptibility to several cancers, including epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). We have carried out fine-mapping of this region in EOC which implicates an association with a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within the TERT promoter. We demonstrate that the minor alleles at rs2736109, and at an additional TERT promoter SNP, rs2736108, are associated with decreased breast cancer risk, and that the combination of both SNPs substantially reduces TERT promoter activity.
Survivors of hereditary retinoblastoma have a high risk of second primary malignancies, but it has not been investigated whether specific RB1 germline mutations are associated with greater risk of second primary malignancies in a large cohort. We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 199 survivors of hereditary retinoblastoma with a documented RB1 germline mutation diagnosed between 1905 and 2005. In total, 44 hereditary retinoblastoma survivors developed a second primary malignancy after a median follow-up of 30.2 years (range 1.33–76.0). A significantly increased risk of second primary malignancy was observed among carriers of one of the 11 recurrent CGA>TGA nonsense RB1 mutations (hazard ratio (HR) = 3.53; [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.82–6.84]; P = .000), and there was a significantly lower risk for subjects with a low penetrance mutation (HR = .19; [95% CI = .05–.81]; P = .025). Our findings suggest a genotype-phenotype correlation for second primary cancers of retinoblastoma survivors and may impact on long-term surveillance protocols of patients with hereditary retinoblastoma, if confirmed by future studies.
We found a significantly increased risk of retinoblastoma in children conceived by IVF in the total study period 1995-2007. However, this increased risk was mostly based on the much stronger risk increase observed previously, for 1995-2002. Caution and awareness on the one hand and avoiding unnecessary worries on the other hand are important at this stage of our knowledge.
Purpose: An assay for the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs61764370, has recently been commercially marketed as a clinical test to aid ovarian cancer risk evaluation in women with family histories of the disease. rs67164370 is in a 3 0 -UTR miRNA binding site of the KRAS oncogene and is a candidate for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) susceptibility. However, only one published article, analyzing fewer than 1,000 subjects in total, has examined this association. Conclusions: These data exclude the possibility of an association between rs61764370 and a clinically significant risk of ovarian cancer or of familial ovarian cancer. Use of this SNP for ovarian cancer clinical risk prediction, therefore, seems unwarranted.
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