Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?

<p>Abstract</p> <p>The BRCA1/2 genes account for a significant portion of hereditary breast and ovarian cancers and they are especially prevalent in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. Women who have a mutation can prevent breast and ovarian cancer with surgical intervention. We descr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saunders Katherine H, Nazareth Shivani, Pressman Peter I
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-06-01
Series:Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
Online Access:http://www.hccpjournal.com/content/9/1/3
id doaj-91cd10b24add4e74a6b0bebb09239d6e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-91cd10b24add4e74a6b0bebb09239d6e2020-11-25T01:41:00ZengBMCHereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice1897-42872011-06-0191310.1186/1897-4287-9-3Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?Saunders Katherine HNazareth ShivaniPressman Peter I<p>Abstract</p> <p>The BRCA1/2 genes account for a significant portion of hereditary breast and ovarian cancers and they are especially prevalent in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. Women who have a mutation can prevent breast and ovarian cancer with surgical intervention. We describe an Ashkenazi Jewish patient who illustrates that current testing criteria are too restrictive, particularly for this population of patients. The patient's sister was diagnosed with breast cancer at age 33; however, she was not a mutation carrier. Based on practice guidelines, the patient was not recommended genetic testing. She subsequently underwent direct-to-consumer (DTC) testing and discovered that she was a mutation carrier. This case demonstrates the need for clinicians to be aware of the higher prevalence of BRCA mutations in the Ashkenazi population. It also exemplifies the need to involve medical professionals, including genetic counselors, in the dissemination of DNA test results.</p> http://www.hccpjournal.com/content/9/1/3
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saunders Katherine H
Nazareth Shivani
Pressman Peter I
spellingShingle Saunders Katherine H
Nazareth Shivani
Pressman Peter I
Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
author_facet Saunders Katherine H
Nazareth Shivani
Pressman Peter I
author_sort Saunders Katherine H
title Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
title_short Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
title_full Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
title_fullStr Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
title_full_unstemmed Case report: BRCA in the Ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
title_sort case report: brca in the ashkenazi population: are current testing guidelines too exclusive?
publisher BMC
series Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
issn 1897-4287
publishDate 2011-06-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>The BRCA1/2 genes account for a significant portion of hereditary breast and ovarian cancers and they are especially prevalent in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. Women who have a mutation can prevent breast and ovarian cancer with surgical intervention. We describe an Ashkenazi Jewish patient who illustrates that current testing criteria are too restrictive, particularly for this population of patients. The patient's sister was diagnosed with breast cancer at age 33; however, she was not a mutation carrier. Based on practice guidelines, the patient was not recommended genetic testing. She subsequently underwent direct-to-consumer (DTC) testing and discovered that she was a mutation carrier. This case demonstrates the need for clinicians to be aware of the higher prevalence of BRCA mutations in the Ashkenazi population. It also exemplifies the need to involve medical professionals, including genetic counselors, in the dissemination of DNA test results.</p>
url http://www.hccpjournal.com/content/9/1/3
work_keys_str_mv AT saunderskatherineh casereportbrcaintheashkenazipopulationarecurrenttestingguidelinestooexclusive
AT nazarethshivani casereportbrcaintheashkenazipopulationarecurrenttestingguidelinestooexclusive
AT pressmanpeteri casereportbrcaintheashkenazipopulationarecurrenttestingguidelinestooexclusive
_version_ 1725043099341684736