Tuesday, 6 July 2010 at 12:19, Bloomberg
A genetic mutation linked to breast cancer in women also predisposes men to the disease, with 1 in 12 male carriers developing tumors by age 80, researchers said. Scientists from Manchester and Birmingham, England, tracked 321 families with faulty BRCA2 genes to pinpoint the risk for men who have the mutation. The study, published in the Journal of Medical Genetics, found 7.1 per cent of men developed the disease by age 70. The risk rose to almost 9 per cent in the following decade, the study found. While 60 per cent of women with mutations in a breast cancer gene develop malignancies, the risk in men isn’t as well known, said researchers led by Gareth Evans from the Department of Genetic Medicine at Manchester Academic Health Science Centre and St. Mary’s Hospital. The results of the study, the largest ever conducted in BRCA2-affected families, confirms the lifetime risk is as great as 9 per cent, they said. “These risks are sufficient to increase awareness of breast cancer among men in BRCA2 families and to stress the importance of early presentation with breast symptoms,’’ the researchers said.
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