Cancers (Jul 2021)

Genomic Risk Prediction for Breast Cancer in Older Women

  • Paul Lacaze,
  • Andrew Bakshi,
  • Moeen Riaz,
  • Suzanne G. Orchard,
  • Jane Tiller,
  • Johannes T. Neumann,
  • Prudence R. Carr,
  • Amit D. Joshi,
  • Yin Cao,
  • Erica T. Warner,
  • Alisa Manning,
  • Tú Nguyen-Dumont,
  • Melissa C. Southey,
  • Roger L. Milne,
  • Leslie Ford,
  • Robert Sebra,
  • Eric Schadt,
  • Lucy Gately,
  • Peter Gibbs,
  • Bryony A. Thompson,
  • Finlay A. Macrae,
  • Paul James,
  • Ingrid Winship,
  • Catriona McLean,
  • John R. Zalcberg,
  • Robyn L. Woods,
  • Andrew T. Chan,
  • Anne M. Murray,
  • John J. McNeil

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13143533
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 14
p. 3533

Abstract

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Genomic risk prediction models for breast cancer (BC) have been predominantly developed with data from women aged 40–69 years. Prospective studies of older women aged ≥70 years have been limited. We assessed the effect of a 313-variant polygenic risk score (PRS) for BC in 6339 older women aged ≥70 years (mean age 75 years) enrolled into the ASPREE trial, a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial investigating the effect of daily 100 mg aspirin on disability-free survival. We evaluated incident BC diagnoses over a median follow-up time of 4.7 years. A multivariable Cox regression model including conventional BC risk factors was applied to prospective data, and re-evaluated after adding the PRS. We also assessed the association of rare pathogenic variants (PVs) in BC susceptibility genes (BRCA1/BRCA2/PALB2/CHEK2/ATM). The PRS, as a continuous variable, was an independent predictor of incident BC (hazard ratio (HR) per standard deviation (SD) = 1.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.3–1.6) and hormone receptor (ER/PR)-positive disease (HR = 1.5 (CI 1.2–1.9)). Women in the top quintile of the PRS distribution had over two-fold higher risk of BC than women in the lowest quintile (HR = 2.2 (CI 1.2–3.9)). The concordance index of the model without the PRS was 0.62 (95% CI 0.56–0.68), which improved after addition of the PRS to 0.65 (95% CI 0.59–0.71). Among 41 (0.6%) carriers of PVs in BC susceptibility genes, we observed no incident BC diagnoses. Our study demonstrates that a PRS predicts incident BC risk in women aged 70 years and older, suggesting potential clinical utility extends to this older age group.

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