Hereditary breast–ovarian cancer syndrome

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File:PedigreechartC.png
Ovarian and breast cancer patients in a pedigree chart of a family

Hereditary breast–ovarian cancer syndromes (HBOC) are cancer syndromes that produce higher than normal levels of breast cancer and ovarian cancer in genetically related families (either one individual had both, or several individuals in the pedigree had one or the other disease). The hereditary factors may be proven or suspected to cause the pattern of breast and ovarian cancer occurrences in the family.[1]

Hereditary causes






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Approximate proportion of hereditary breast cancer cases caused by each gene

  BRCA1 mutations (28%)
  BRCA2 mutations (19%)
  All other known genes (8%)
  Unknown genes or multiple genes (45%)

A number of genes are associated with HBOC.[2] The most common of the known causes of HBOC are:

  • BRCA mutations:[2] Harmful mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes can produce very high rates of breast and ovarian cancer, as well as increased rates of other cancers.

Other identified genes include:

Approximately 45% of HBOC cases involve unidentified genes, or multiple genes.[2]

References

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External links