Histological features of extratumoral breast lesions as a predictive factor of familial breast cancer

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to verify whether histopathological features of extratumoral and of primary tumor breast tissue could play a role in identifying patients with familial characteristics. We examined the clinicopathological features of 504 patients with sporadic or familial breast cancer stratified for risk of BRCA mutation. Patients with a higher risk of being carrier of BRCA gene mutations were significantly associated with tumor poor differentiation (p=0.003), positive lymph node invasion (p=0.02) and presence of vascular peritumoral invasion (p=0.008). Among the extra-tumoral lesions, only the epithelial proliferative lesions were related to higher mutation risk both in the overall series and familial patients (p<0.0001 and p=0.003, respectively). Interestingly, a significant difference in terms of high mutation risk was observed in usual ductal hyperplasia lesions (UDH), (p=0.002). We suggest that vascular peritumoral invasion and UDH lesions could predict a higher mutation risk of BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and help in individuating patient candidates to further molecular analysis.

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APA

Mangia, A., Tommasi, S., Bruno, M., Malfettone, A., D’Amico, C., Zito, F. A., … Simone, G. (2010). Histological features of extratumoral breast lesions as a predictive factor of familial breast cancer. Oncology Reports, 23(6), 1641–1645. https://doi.org/10.3892/or_00000806

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