Certain types of tumors can occur more frequently in families - this may be due to a hereditary predisposition. A genetic test provides clarity as to whether the risk of cancer is increased. The consequences can be serious.
Text: Helga Kessler
The patient is only 28 years old when she receives the diagnosis: Breast cancer, triple negative. This means that the tumor is neither sensitive to the hormones oestrogen and progesterone nor does it overexpress the receptor for HER2. This means that there are no sites where medication can be applied. “This form of breast cancer is particularly difficult to treat and has a higher risk of spreading,” says Esther Birindelli, Senior Physician at the Clinic for Gynecology. If the tumor is triple negative and the breast cancer patient is younger than 60, a genetic test is always recommended. If it turns out that there is a change in the genetic material, the risk of ovarian cancer also increases. Family members could also be affected.
Cell damage is no longer repaired
Most of the 6,200 cases of breast cancer that occur in Switzerland each year have no hereditary cause. In only 5 to 10 percent of all breast cancers are the genes altered, particularly frequently the “repair genes” BRCA1 or BRCA2. The proteins that are formed after these genes have been produced are then no longer able to repair cell damage. This increases the risk of cancer. Affected women are 50 to 80 percent likely to develop breast cancer in middle age. The average risk of breast cancer in the population is significantly lower and the disease tends to occur later.
The 28-year-old patient had an aunt and grandmother with breast cancer on her father’s side and a cousin on her mother’s side. In fact, the genetic test reveals a pathogenic BRCA1 mutation. She therefore has the mammary gland tissue under the skin removed on both sides and the breasts reconstructed. The risk of breast cancer is most reduced by this operation if it is carried out before a disease occurs. Regular checks with ultrasound and MRI should ensure that a new flare-up of the cancer in the young woman is detected early enough. She is also advised to have her ovaries removed at the age of 40 at the latest as a precautionary measure.