학술논문

Polygenic susceptibility to prostate and breast cancer: implications for personalised screening.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
British Journal of Cancer. 5/10/2011, Vol. 104 Issue 10, p1656-1663. 8p. 3 Charts, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*BREAST cancer
*PROSTATE cancer
*MEDICAL screening
*MEDICAL care for older people
*HEALTH policy
*BREAST tumors
*COMPARATIVE studies
*DISEASE susceptibility
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*PROSTATE tumors
*RESEARCH
*RESEARCH funding
*EVALUATION research
Language
ISSN
0007-0920
Abstract
Background: We modelled the efficiency of a personalised approach to screening for prostate and breast cancer based on age and polygenic risk-profile compared with the standard approach based on age alone.Methods: We compared the number of cases potentially detectable by screening in a population undergoing personalised screening with a population undergoing screening based on age alone. Polygenic disease risk was assumed to have a log-normal relative risk distribution predicted for the currently known prostate or breast cancer susceptibility variants (N=31 and N=18, respectively).Results: Compared with screening men based on age alone (aged 55-79: 10-year absolute risk ≥2%), personalised screening of men age 45-79 at the same risk threshold would result in 16% fewer men being eligible for screening at a cost of 3% fewer screen-detectable cases, but with added benefit of detecting additional cases in younger men at high risk. Similarly, compared with screening women based on age alone (aged 47-79: 10-year absolute risk ≥2.5%), personalised screening of women age 35-79 at the same risk threshold would result in 24% fewer women being eligible for screening at a cost of 14% fewer screen-detectable cases.Conclusion: Personalised screening approach could improve the efficiency of screening programmes. This has potential implications on informing public health policy on cancer screening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]