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[Current clinical issues and recent trends in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer in Japan-genetic testing for HBOC and risk-reducing surgery].

The recognition of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC) is gradually spreading in Japan after a famous American actress made it public that she underwent risk-reducing mastectomy (RRM) based on mutation of BRCA1. HBOC is a cancer susceptibility syndrome involving breast, ovarian, or prostate cancers due to germline mutation of BRCA1 or BRCA2. Although the frequency is low, genomic rearrangement is also found in Japan; therefore, in addition to PCR-direct sequencing, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) should be performed in genetic testing for HBOC. Recently, candidate genes other than BRCA1/2, such as RAD51C, PALB2, and BRIP1, have been identified for hereditary breast cancers. Variants of uncertain significance are seen in approximately 4-6% of all genetic testing reports for BRCA1/2. ACMG recommends the use of the term"variant"in addition to a modifier such as pathogenic, benign, and so on, instead of terms such as mutation or polymorphism. The incidence of ovarian cancer is not increased in women from breast cancer-only families that test negative for BRCA1/2 mutations. Therefore, intensive gynecological surveillance may not be needed for these clients. Basic data such as penetrance and cumulative risks of HBOC in Japanese populations are insufficient for risk assessment in genetic counseling. The Japanese HBOC consortium was established, and as one of the activities of the consortium, the registration project will start to provide essential genetic information in clinical practice. In Japan risk-reducing surgeries are, albeit gradually, increasingly being performed to potentially protect mutation carriers against HBOC. Risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) is effective in the reduction of the incidence of breast cancer, as well as of ovarian cancer. Furthermore, RRSO is associated with improved overall survival in BRCA1/2 mutation carriers. RRM also reduces the risk of breast cancer by more than 90%, but the survival benefit remains unknown. Recently, contralateral RRM has shown improved overall survival in a prospective analysis. Pathological examination of resected surgical specimens from RRSO revealed that some serous ovarian carcinomas originated from fimbriae of the uterine tube, showing focal p53 overexpression (p53 signature) in the tubal epithelium. Therefore, initial bilateral salpingectomy followed by a delayed oophorectomy may be a proposed alternative to RRSO, but there is no prospective evidence on the efficacy of bilateral salpingectomy.

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