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dc.contributor.authorSouthey MCen
dc.contributor.authorPorter Len
dc.contributor.authorGiles GGen
dc.contributor.authorMcCredie MRen
dc.contributor.authorHopper JLen
dc.contributor.authorVenter DJen
dc.contributor.authorTesoriero AAen
dc.contributor.authorAndersen CRen
dc.contributor.authorJennings KMen
dc.contributor.authorBrown SMen
dc.contributor.authorDite GSen
dc.contributor.authorJenkins MAen
dc.contributor.authorOsborne RHen
dc.contributor.authorMaskiell JAen
dc.date.issued1999
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/30319
dc.description.abstractThe frequency, in women with breast cancer, of mutations and other variants in the susceptibility gene, BRCA1, was investigated using a population-based case-control-family study. Cases were women living in Melbourne or Sydney, Australia, with histologically confirmed, first primary, invasive breast cancer, diagnosed before the age of 40 years, recorded on the state Cancer Registries. Controls were women without breast cancer, frequency-matched for age, randomly selected from electoral rolls. Full manual sequencing of the coding region of BRCA1 was conducted in a randomly stratified sample of 91 cases; 47 with, and 44 without, a family history of breast cancer in a first- or second-degree relative. All detected variants were tested in a random sample of 67 controls. Three cases with a (protein-truncating) mutation were detected. Only one case had a family history; her mother had breast cancer, but did not carry the mutation. The proportion of Australian women with breast cancer before age 40 who carry a germline mutation in BRCA1 was estimated to be 3.8% (95% CI 0.3-12.6%). Seven rare variants were also detected, but for none was there evidence of a strong effect on breast cancer susceptibility. Therefore, on a population basis, rare variants are likely to contribute little to breast cancer incidenceen
dc.publisherBritish Journal of Canceren
dc.rightsOther
dc.subjectAdulten
dc.subjectDNA Primersen
dc.subjectepidemiologyen
dc.subjectFamilyen
dc.subjectFemaleen
dc.subjectGenes,Brca1en
dc.subjectgeneticsen
dc.subjecthistoryen
dc.subjectHumansen
dc.subjectIncidenceen
dc.subjectLife Styleen
dc.subjectAmino Acid Substitutionen
dc.subjectMutationen
dc.subjectpathologyen
dc.subjectPoint Mutationen
dc.subjectPolymerase Chain Reactionen
dc.subjectPolymorphism,Geneticen
dc.subjectPopulation Surveillanceen
dc.subjectPrevalenceen
dc.subjectRandom Allocationen
dc.subjectRegistriesen
dc.subjectResearchen
dc.subjectAustraliaen
dc.subjectResearch Support,Non-U.S.Gov'ten
dc.subjectWomenen
dc.subjectBase Sequenceen
dc.subjectbreasten
dc.subjectBreast Neoplasmsen
dc.subjectcanceren
dc.subjectcancer registryen
dc.subjectDemographyen
dc.subject.otherCancer Control, Survivorship, and Outcomes Research - Surveillanceen
dc.subject.otherCancer Type - Breast Canceren
dc.titleBRCA1 mutations and other sequence variants in a population-based sample of Australian women with breast canceren
dc.typeArticleen
usyd.facultySeS faculties schools::Faculty of Medicine and Healthen


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