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PDQ Cancer Information Summaries [Internet]. Bethesda (MD): National Cancer Institute (US); 2002-.
PDQ Cancer Information Summaries [Internet].
Show detailsThis PDQ cancer information summary for health professionals provides comprehensive, peer-reviewed, evidence-based information about the genetics of prostate cancer. It is intended as a resource to inform and assist clinicians who care for cancer patients. It does not provide formal guidelines or recommendations for making health care decisions.
This summary is reviewed regularly and updated as necessary by the PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Executive Summary
This executive summary reviews the topics covered in this PDQ summary on the genetics of prostate cancer, with hyperlinks to detailed sections below that describe the evidence on each topic.
- Inheritance and RiskA genetic contribution to prostate cancer risk has been documented, and knowledge about the molecular genetics of the disease is increasing. Clinical management based on knowledge of inherited pathogenic variants is emerging. Factors suggestive of a genetic contribution to prostate cancer include the following: 1) multiple affected first-degree relatives (FDRs) with prostate cancer, including three successive generations with prostate cancer in the maternal or paternal lineage; 2) early-onset prostate cancer (age ≤55 y); and 3) prostate cancer with a family history of other cancers (e.g., breast, ovarian, pancreatic).
- Associated Genes and Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs)Several genes and chromosomal regions have been found to be associated with prostate cancer in various linkage analyses, case-control studies, genome-wide association studies (GWAS), and admixture mapping studies. Pathogenic variants in genes of high and moderate penetrance, such as BRCA1, BRCA2, the mismatch repair genes, and HOXB13 confer modest to high lifetime risk of prostate cancer. Some, such as BRCA2, have emerging clinical relevance in the treatment and screening for prostate cancer. In addition, GWAS have identified more than 100 SNPs associated with the development of prostate cancer, but the clinical utility of these findings remains uncertain. Studies are ongoing to assess whether combinations of these SNPs may have clinical relevance in identifying individuals at increased risk of the disease. Studies analyzing the association between variants and aggressive disease are also ongoing.
- Clinical ManagementInformation is limited about the efficacy of commonly available screening tests such as the digital rectal exam and serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels in men genetically predisposed to developing prostate cancer. Initial reports of targeted PSA screening of carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants has yielded a higher proportion of aggressive disease. On the basis of the available data, most professional societies and organizations recommend that high-risk men engage in shared decision-making with their health care providers and develop individualized plans for prostate cancer screening based on their risk factors. For example, some experts suggest initiating prostate cancer screening at age 45 years in carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants and consideration of screening in BRCA1 carriers. Inherited variants may influence treatment decisions, particularly for males with pathogenic variants in DNA repair genes. Studies have reported improved response rates to poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition among males with metastatic, castrate-resistant prostate cancer carrying germline pathogenic variants in BRCA2 and other DNA repair genes.
- Psychosocial and Behavioral IssuesPsychosocial research in men at increased hereditary risk of prostate cancer has focused on risk perception, interest in genetic testing, and screening behaviors. Study conclusions vary regarding whether FDRs of prostate cancer patients accurately estimate their prostate cancer risk, with some studies reporting that men with a family history of prostate cancer consider their risk to be the same as or less than that of the average man. Factors such as being married and the confusion between benign prostatic hyperplasia and prostate cancer have been found to influence perceived risk of prostate cancer. Studies conducted before the availability of genetic testing for prostate cancer susceptibility showed that factors found to positively influence men’s hypothetical interest in genetic testing included the advice of their primary care physician, a combination of the emotional distress and concern about prostate cancer treatment effects, and having children. Several small studies have examined the behavioral correlates of prostate cancer screening at average and increased prostate cancer risk based on family history; in general, results appear contradictory regarding whether men with a family history are more likely to be screened than those not at risk and whether the screening is appropriate for their risk status. Research is ongoing to better understand and address psychosocial and behavioral issues in high-risk families.
Introduction
[Note: Many of the medical and scientific terms used in this summary are found in the NCI Dictionary of Genetics Terms. When a linked term is clicked, the definition will appear in a separate window.]
[Note: Many of the genes and conditions described in this summary are found in the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) catalog. Refer to OMIM for more information.]
[Note: A concerted effort is being made within the genetics community to shift terminology used to describe genetic variation. The shift is to use the term “variant” rather than the term “mutation” to describe a difference that exists between the person or group being studied and the reference sequence. Variants can then be further classified as benign (harmless), likely benign, of uncertain significance, likely pathogenic, or pathogenic (disease causing). Throughout this summary, we will use the term pathogenic variant to describe a disease-causing mutation. Refer to the Cancer Genetics Overview summary for more information about variant classification.]
The public health burden of prostate cancer is substantial. A total of 174,650 new cases of prostate cancer and 31,620 deaths from the disease are anticipated in the United States in 2019, making it the most frequent nondermatologic cancer among U.S. males.[1] A man’s lifetime risk of prostate cancer is one in nine. Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in men, exceeded only by lung cancer.[1]
Some men with prostate cancer remain asymptomatic and die from unrelated causes rather than as a result of the cancer itself. This may be due to the advanced age of many men at the time of diagnosis, slow tumor growth, or response to therapy.[2] The estimated number of men with latent prostate carcinoma (i.e., prostate cancer that is present in the prostate gland but never detected or diagnosed during a patient’s life) is greater than the number of men with clinically detected disease. A better understanding is needed of the genetic and biologic mechanisms that determine why some prostate carcinomas remain clinically silent, while others cause serious, even life-threatening illness.[2]
Prostate cancer exhibits tremendous differences in incidence among populations worldwide; the ratio of countries with high and low rates of prostate cancer ranges from 60-fold to 100-fold.[3] Asian men typically have a very low incidence of prostate cancer, with age-adjusted incidence rates ranging from 2 to 10 cases per 100,000 men. Higher incidence rates are generally observed in northern European countries. African American men, however, have the highest incidence of prostate cancer in the world; within the United States, African American men have a 60% higher incidence rate than white men.[4] African American men have been reported to have more than twice the rate of prostate cancer–specific death compared with non-Hispanic white men.[1] Differences in race-specific prostate cancer survival estimates may be narrowing over time.[5]
These differences may be due to the interplay of genetic, environmental, and social influences (such as access to health care), which may affect the development and progression of the disease.[6] Differences in screening practices have also had a substantial influence on prostate cancer incidence, by permitting prostate cancer to be diagnosed in some patients before symptoms develop or before abnormalities on physical examination are detectable. An analysis of population-based data from Sweden suggested that a diagnosis of prostate cancer in one brother leads to an early diagnosis in a second brother using prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening.[7] This may account for an increase in prostate cancer diagnosed in younger men that was evident in nationwide incidence data. A genetic contribution to prostate cancer risk has been documented, and there is increasing knowledge of the molecular genetics of the disease, although much of what is known is not yet clinically actionable. Malignant transformation of prostate epithelial cells and progression of prostate carcinoma are likely to result from a complex series of initiation and promotional events under both genetic and environmental influences.[8]
Risk Factors for Prostate Cancer
The three most important recognized risk factors for prostate cancer in the United States are:
- Age.
Age
Age is an important risk factor for prostate cancer. Prostate cancer is rarely seen in men younger than 40 years; the incidence rises rapidly with each decade thereafter. For example, the probability of being diagnosed with prostate cancer is 1 in 437 for men 49 years or younger, 1 in 59 for men aged 50 through 59 years, 1 in 22 for men aged 60 through 69 years, and 1 in 13 for men aged 70 years and older, with an overall lifetime risk of developing prostate cancer of 1 in 9.[1]
Approximately 10% of prostate cancer cases are diagnosed in men younger than 56 years and represent early-onset prostate cancer. Data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program show that early-onset prostate cancer is increasing, and there is evidence that some cases may be more aggressive.[9] Because early-onset cancers may result from germline pathogenic variants, young men with prostate cancer are being extensively studied with the goal of identifying prostate cancer susceptibility genes.
Ancestry
The risk of developing and dying from prostate cancer is dramatically higher among blacks, is of intermediate levels among whites, and is lowest among native Japanese.[10,11] Conflicting data have been published regarding the etiology of these outcomes, but some evidence is available that access to health care may play a role in disease outcomes.[12]
Family history of prostate cancer
Prostate cancer is highly heritable; the inherited risk of prostate cancer has been estimated to be as high as 60%.[13] As with breast and colon cancer, familial clustering of prostate cancer has been reported frequently.[14-18] From 5% to 10% of prostate cancer cases are believed to be primarily caused by high-risk inherited genetic factors or prostate cancer susceptibility genes. Results from several large case-control studies and cohort studies representing various populations suggest that family history is a major risk factor in prostate cancer.[15,19,20] A family history of a brother or father with prostate cancer increases the risk of prostate cancer, and the risk is inversely related to the age of the affected relative.[16-20] However, at least some familial aggregation is due to increased prostate cancer screening in families thought to be at high risk.[21]
Although some of the prostate cancer studies examining risks associated with family history have used hospital-based series, several studies described population-based series.[22-24] The latter are thought to provide information that is more generalizable. A meta-analysis of 33 epidemiologic case-control and cohort-based studies has provided more detailed information regarding risk ratios related to family history of prostate cancer. Risk appeared to be greater for men with affected brothers than for men with affected fathers in this meta-analysis. Although the reason for this difference in risk is unknown, possible hypotheses have included X-linked or recessive inheritance. In addition, risk increased with increasing numbers of affected close relatives. Risk also increased when a first-degree relative (FDR) was diagnosed with prostate cancer before age 65 years. (Refer to Table 1 for a summary of the relative risks [RRs] related to a family history of prostate cancer.)[25]
Table 1. Relative Risk (RR) Related to Family History of Prostate Cancera
Risk Group | RR for Prostate Cancer (95% CI) |
---|---|
Brother(s) with prostate cancer diagnosed at any age | 3.14 (2.37–4.15) |
Father with prostate cancer diagnosed at any age | 2.35 (2.02–2.72) |
One affected FDR diagnosed at any age | 2.48 (2.25–2.74) |
Affected FDRs diagnosed <65 y | 2.87 (2.21–3.74) |
Affected FDRs diagnosed ≥65 y | 1.92 (1.49–2.47) |
Second-degree relatives diagnosed at any age | 2.52 (0.99–6.46) |
Two or more affected FDRs diagnosed at any age | 4.39 (2.61–7.39) |
CI = confidence interval; FDR = first-degree relative.
aAdapted from Kiciński et al.[25]
Among the many data sources included in this meta-analysis, those from the Swedish population-based Family-Cancer Database warrant special comment. These data were derived from a resource that contained more than 11.8 million individuals, among whom there were 26,651 men with medically verified prostate cancer, of which 5,623 were familial cases.[26] The size of this data set, with its nearly complete ascertainment of the entire Swedish population and objective verification of cancer diagnoses, should yield risk estimates that are both accurate and free of bias. When the familial age-specific hazard ratios (HRs) for prostate cancer diagnosis and mortality were computed, as expected, the HR for prostate cancer diagnosis increased with more family history. Specifically, HRs for prostate cancer were 2.12 (95% CI, 2.05–2.20) with an affected father only, 2.96 (95% CI, 2.80–3.13) with an affected brother only, and 8.51 (95% CI, 6.13–11.80) with a father and two brothers affected. The highest HR, 17.74 (95% CI, 12.26–25.67), was seen in men with three brothers diagnosed with prostate cancer. The HRs were even higher when the affected relative was diagnosed with prostate cancer before age 55 years.
A separate analysis of this Swedish database reported that the cumulative (absolute) risks of prostate cancer among men in families with two or more affected cases were 5% by age 60 years, 15% by age 70 years, and 30% by age 80 years, compared with 0.45%, 3%, and 10%, respectively, by the same ages in the general population. The risks were even higher when the affected father was diagnosed before age 70 years.[27] The corresponding familial population attributable fractions (PAFs) were 8.9%, 1.8%, and 1.0% for the same three age groups, respectively, yielding a total PAF of 11.6% (i.e., approximately 11.6% of all prostate cancers in Sweden can be accounted for on the basis of familial history of the disease).
The risk of prostate cancer may also increase in men who have a family history of breast cancer. Approximately 9.6% of the Iowa cohort had a family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer in a mother or sister at baseline, and this was positively associated with prostate cancer risk (age-adjusted RR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.0–3.0; multivariate RR, 1.7; 95% CI, 0.9–3.2). Men with a family history of both prostate and breast/ovarian cancer were also at increased risk of prostate cancer (RR, 5.8; 95% CI, 2.4–14.0).[22] Analysis of data from the Women's Health Initiative also showed that a family history of prostate cancer was associated with an increase in the risk of postmenopausal breast cancer (adjusted HR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.02–1.26).[28] Further analyses showed that breast cancer risk was associated with a family history of both breast and prostate cancers; the risk was higher in black women than in white women. Other studies, however, did not find an association between family history of female breast cancer and risk of prostate cancer.[22,29] A family history of prostate cancer also increases the risk of breast cancer among female relatives.[30] The association between prostate cancer and breast cancer in the same family may be explained, in part, by the increased risk of prostate cancer among men with BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants in the setting of hereditary breast/ovarian cancer or early-onset prostate cancer.[31-34] (Refer to the BRCA1 and BRCA2 section of this summary for more information.)
Prostate cancer clusters with particular intensity in some families. Highly penetrant genetic variants are thought to be associated with prostate cancer risk in these families. (Refer to the Linkage Analyses section of this summary for more information.) Members of such families may benefit from genetic counseling. Emerging recommendations and guidelines for genetic counseling referrals are based on prostate cancer age at diagnosis and specific family cancer history patterns.[35,36] Individuals meeting the following criteria may warrant referral for genetic consultation:[35-38]
- Multiple affected FDRs with prostate cancer.
- Early-onset prostate cancer (age ≤55 y).
- Metastatic prostate cancer.
- Prostate cancer with a family history of other cancers (e.g., breast, ovarian, pancreatic).
Family history has been shown to be a risk factor for men of different races and ethnicities. In a population-based case-control study of prostate cancer among African Americans, whites, and Asian Americans in the United States (Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Hawaii) and Canada (Vancouver and Toronto),[39] 5% of controls and 13% of all cases reported a father, brother, or son with prostate cancer. These prevalence estimates were somewhat lower among Asian Americans than among African Americans or whites. A positive family history was associated with a twofold to threefold increase in RR in each of the three ethnic groups. The overall odds ratio associated with a family history of prostate cancer was 2.5 (95% CI, 1.9–3.3) with adjustment for age and ethnicity.[39]
There is little evidence that family history alone is associated with inferior clinical outcomes. In a cohort of 7,690 men in Germany who were undergoing radical prostatectomy for localized prostate cancer, family history had no bearing on prostate cancer–specific survival.[40]
Other potential modifiers of prostate cancer risk
Endogenous hormones, including both androgens and estrogens, likely influence prostate carcinogenesis. It has been widely reported that eunuchs and other individuals with castrate levels of testosterone before puberty do not develop prostate cancer.[41] Some investigators have considered the potential role of genetic variation in androgen biosynthesis and metabolism in prostate cancer risk,[42] including the potential role of the androgen receptor (AR) CAG repeat length in exon 1. This modulates AR activity, which may influence prostate cancer risk.[43] For example, a meta-analysis reported that AR CAG repeat length greater than or equal to 20 repeats conferred a protective effect for prostate cancer in subsets of men.[44]
(Refer to the PDQ summary on Prostate Cancer Prevention for more information about nongenetic modifiers of prostate cancer risk in the general population.)
Multiple Primaries
The SEER Cancer Registries assessed the risk of developing a second primary cancer in 292,029 men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1973 and 2000. Excluding subsequent prostate cancer and adjusting for the risk of death from other causes, the cumulative incidence of a second primary cancer among all patients was 15.2% at 25 years (95% CI, 15.0%–15.4%). There was a significant risk of new malignancies (all cancers combined) among men diagnosed before age 50 years, no excess or deficit in cancer risk in men aged 50 to 59 years, and a deficit in cancer risk in all older age groups. The authors suggested that this deficit may be attributable to decreased cancer surveillance in an elderly population. Excess risks of second primary cancers included cancers of the small intestine, soft tissue, bladder, thyroid, and thymus; and melanoma. Prostate cancer diagnosed in patients aged 50 years or younger was associated with an excess risk of pancreatic cancer.[45]
A review of more than 441,000 men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1992 and 2010 demonstrated similar findings, with an overall reduction in the risk of being diagnosed with a second primary cancer. This study also examined the risk of second primary cancers in 44,310 men (10%) by treatment modality for localized cancer. The study suggested that men who received radiation therapy had increases in bladder (standardized incidence ratio [SIR], 1.42) and rectal cancer risk (SIR, 1.70) compared with those who did not receive radiation therapy (SIRbladder, 0.76; SIRrectal, 0.74).[46]
The underlying etiology of developing a second primary cancer after prostate cancer may be related to various factors, including treatment modality. More than 50% of the small intestine tumors were carcinoid malignancies, suggesting possible hormonal influences. The excess of pancreatic cancer may be due to pathogenic variants in BRCA2, which predisposes to both. The risk of melanoma was most pronounced in the first year of follow-up after diagnosis, raising the possibility that this is the result of increased screening and surveillance.[45]
One Swedish study using the nationwide Swedish Family Cancer Database assessed the role of family history in the risk of a second primary cancer after prostate cancer. Of 18,207 men with prostate cancer, 560 developed a second primary malignancy. Of those, the RR was increased for colorectal, kidney, bladder, and squamous cell skin cancers. Having a paternal family history of prostate cancer was associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer, myeloma, and squamous cell skin cancer. Among prostate cancer probands, those with a family history of colorectal cancer, bladder cancer, or chronic lymphoid leukemia were at increased risk of that specific cancer as a second primary cancer.[47]
Data are emerging that prostate cancer patients who have at least one additional primary malignancy disproportionately harbor pathogenic variants in known cancer-predisposing genes, such as BRCA2 and MLH1.[48]
Risk of Other Cancers in Multiple-Case Families
Several reports have suggested an elevated risk of various other cancers among relatives within multiple-case prostate cancer families, but none of these associations have been established definitively.[49-51]
In a population-based Finnish study of 202 multiple-case prostate cancer families, no excess risk of all cancers combined (other than prostate cancer) was detected in 5,523 family members. Female family members had a marginal excess of gastric cancer (SIR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.0–3.2). No difference in familial cancer risk was observed when families affected by clinically aggressive prostate cancers were compared with those having nonaggressive prostate cancer. These data suggest that familial prostate cancer is a cancer site–specific disorder.[52]
A study from the Swedish Family Cancer Database reported an increased risk of the following cancers in families where multiple members had a prostate cancer diagnosis: myeloma (RR, 2.44; 95% CI, 1.24–4.82), kidney cancer (RR, 2.32; 95% CI, 1.23–4.36), nonthyroid endocrine tumors (RR, 2.18; 95% CI, 1.06–4.49), melanoma (RR, 1.82; 95% CI, 1.18–2.80), nervous system tumors (RR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.08–2.91), and female breast cancer (RR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.02–1.86).[53] It remains to be determined whether these associations are from a common genetic basis, shared environment, or a combination of factors.
Inheritance of Prostate Cancer Risk
Many types of epidemiologic studies (case-control, cohort, twin, family) strongly suggest that prostate cancer susceptibility genes exist in the population. Analysis of longer follow-up of the monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs in Scandinavia concluded that 58% (95% CI, 52%–63%) of prostate cancer risk may be accounted for by heritable factors.[13] Additionally, among affected MZ and DZ pairs, the time to diagnosis in the second twin was shortest in MZ twins (mean, 3.8 y in MZ twins vs. 6.5 y in DZ twins). This is in agreement with a previous U.S. study that showed a concordance of 7.1% between DZ twin pairs and a 27% concordance between MZ twin pairs.[54] The first segregation analysis was performed in 1992 using families from 740 consecutive probands who had radical prostatectomies between 1982 and 1989. The study results suggested that familial clustering of disease among men with early-onset prostate cancer was best explained by the presence of a rare (frequency of 0.003) autosomal dominant, highly penetrant allele(s).[15] Hereditary prostate cancer susceptibility genes were predicted to account for almost half of early-onset disease (age 55 y or younger). In addition, early-onset disease has been further supported to have a strong genetic component from the study of common variants associated with disease onset before age 55 years.[55]
Subsequent segregation analyses generally agreed with the conclusions but differed in the details regarding frequency, penetrance, and mode of inheritance.[56-58] A study of 4,288 men who underwent radical prostatectomy between 1966 and 1995 found that the best fitting genetic model of inheritance was the presence of a rare, autosomal dominant susceptibility gene (frequency of 0.06). In this study, the lifetime risk in carriers was estimated to be 89% by age 85 years and 3.9% for noncarriers.[54] This study also suggested the presence of genetic heterogeneity, as the model did not reliably predict prostate cancer risk in FDRs of probands who were diagnosed at age 70 years or older. More recent segregation analyses have concluded that there are multiple genes associated with prostate cancer [59-62] in a pattern similar to other adult-onset hereditary cancer syndromes, such as those involving the breast, ovary, colorectum, kidney, and melanoma. In addition, a segregation analysis of 1,546 families from Finland found evidence for mendelian recessive inheritance. Results showed that individuals carrying the risk allele were diagnosed with prostate cancer at younger ages (<66 y) than noncarriers. This is the first segregation analysis to show a recessive mode of inheritance.[63]
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- Davis EJ, Beebe-Dimmer JL, Yee CL, et al.: Risk of second primary tumors in men diagnosed with prostate cancer: a population-based cohort study. Cancer 120 (17): 2735-41, 2014. [PMC free article: PMC4195444] [PubMed: 24842808]
- Zhang H, Bermejo JL, Sundquist J, et al.: Prostate cancer as a first and second cancer: effect of family history. Br J Cancer 101 (6): 935-9, 2009. [PMC free article: PMC2743371] [PubMed: 19690542]
- Pilié PG, Johnson AM, Hanson KL, et al.: Germline genetic variants in men with prostate cancer and one or more additional cancers. Cancer 123 (20): 3925-3932, 2017. [PMC free article: PMC6108085] [PubMed: 28657667]
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- Grönberg H, Bergh A, Damber JE, et al.: Cancer risk in families with hereditary prostate carcinoma. Cancer 89 (6): 1315-21, 2000. [PubMed: 11002228]
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Identifying Genes and Inherited Variants Associated With Prostate Cancer Risk
Various research methods have been employed to uncover the landscape of genetic variation associated with prostate cancer. Specific methodologies inform of unique phenotypes or inheritance patterns. The sections below describe prostate cancer research utilizing various methods to highlight their role in uncovering the genetic basis of prostate cancer. In an effort to identify disease susceptibility genes, linkage studies are typically performed on high-risk extended families in which multiple cases of a particular disease have occurred. Typically, pathogenic variants identified through linkage analyses are rare in the population, are moderately to highly penetrant in families, and have large (e.g., relative risk >2.0) effect sizes. The clinical role of pathogenic variants that are identified in linkage studies is a clearer one, establishing precedent for genetic testing for cancer with genes such as BRCA1 and BRCA2. (Refer to the BRCA1 and BRCA2 section in the Clinical Application of Genetic Testing for Inherited Prostate Cancer section of this summary for more information about these genes.) Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are another methodology used to identify candidate loci associated with prostate cancer. Genetic variants identified from GWAS typically are common in the population and have low to modest effect sizes for prostate cancer risk. The clinical role of markers identified from GWAS is an active area of investigation. Case-control studies are useful in validating the findings of linkage studies and GWAS as well as for studying candidate gene alterations for association with prostate cancer risk, although the clinical role of findings from case-control studies needs to be further defined.
Linkage Analyses
Introduction to linkage analyses
The recognition that prostate cancer clusters within families has led many investigators to collect multiple-case families with the goal of localizing prostate cancer susceptibility genes through linkage studies.
Linkage studies are typically performed on high-risk kindreds in whom multiple cases of a particular disease have occurred in an effort to identify disease susceptibility genes. Linkage analysis statistically compares the genotypes between affected and unaffected individuals within the extended family and looks for associations between inherited genetic markers and the disease trait. If an association between a variation at a particular chromosomal region and the disease trait is found (linkage), it provides statistical evidence that the genetic locus harbors a disease susceptibility gene. Once a genomic region of interest has been identified through linkage analysis, additional studies are required to prove that there truly is a susceptibility gene at that position. Linkage analysis is influenced by the following:
- Family size and having a sufficient number of family members who volunteer to contribute DNA.
- The number of disease cases in each family.
- Factors related to age at diagnosis (e.g., utilization of screening).
- Gender differences in disease risk (not relevant in prostate cancer but remains relevant in linkage analysis for other conditions).
- Heterogeneity of disease in cases (e.g., aggressive vs. nonaggressive phenotype).
- Genetic heterogeneity (e.g., multiple genetic variants contribute to the same condition).
- The accuracy of family history information.
Furthermore, because a standard definition of hereditary prostate cancer has not been accepted, prostate cancer linkage studies have not used consistent criteria for enrollment.[1] One criterion that has been proposed is the Hopkins Criteria, which provides a working definition of hereditary prostate cancer families.[2] Using the Hopkins Criteria, kindreds with prostate cancer need to fulfill only one of following criteria to be considered to have hereditary prostate cancer:
- Three or more affected first-degree relatives (father, brother, son).
- Affected relatives in three successive generations of either maternal or paternal lineages.
- At least two relatives affected at age 55 years or younger.
Using these criteria, surgical series have reported that approximately 3% to 5% of men with prostate cancer will be from a family with hereditary prostate cancer.[2,3]
An additional issue in linkage studies is the high background rate of sporadic prostate cancer in the context of family studies. Because a man’s lifetime risk of prostate cancer is one in nine,[4] it is possible that families under study have men with both inherited and sporadic prostate cancer. Thus, men who do not inherit the prostate cancer susceptibility gene that is segregating in their family may still develop prostate cancer, obscuring the genetic signal. There are no clinical or pathological features of prostate cancer that will allow differentiation between inherited and sporadic forms of the disease, although current advances in the understanding of molecular phenotypes of prostate cancer may be informative in identifying inherited prostate cancer. Similarly, there are limited data regarding the clinical phenotype or natural history of prostate cancer associated with specific candidate loci. Measurement of the serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) has been used inconsistently in evaluating families used in linkage analysis studies of prostate cancer. In linkage studies, the definition of an affected man can be biased by the use of serum PSA screening as the rates of prostate cancer in families will differ between screened and unscreened families.
One way to address inconsistencies between linkage studies is to require inclusion criteria that define clinically significant disease (e.g., Gleason score ≥7, PSA ≥20 ng/mL) in an affected man.[5-7] This approach attempts to define a homogeneous set of cases/families to increase the likelihood of identifying a linkage signal. It also prevents the inclusion of cases that may be considered clinically insignificant that were identified by screening in families.
Investigators have also incorporated clinical parameters into linkage analyses with the goal of identifying genes that may influence disease severity.[8,9] This type of approach, however, has not yet led to the identification of consistent linkage signals across datasets.[10,11]
Susceptibility loci identified in linkage analyses
Several proposed prostate cancer susceptibility loci have been identified in families with multiple prostate cancer–affected individuals. Genes residing at risk loci discovered using linkage analysis include HPC1/RNASEL (1q25), PCAP (1q42.2-43), HPCX (Xq27-28), CAPB (1p36), and HPC20 (20q13),[12] as well as intergenic regions at 8p and 8q.[13,14] In addition, the following chromosomal regions have been found to be associated with prostate cancer in more than one study or clinical cohort with a statistically significant (≥2) logarithm of the odds (LOD) score, heterogeneity LOD (HLOD) score, or summary LOD score: 3p14, 3p24-26, 5q11-12, 5q35, 6p22.3, 7q32, 8q13, 9q34, 11q22, 15q11, 16q23, 17q21-22, and 22q12.3.[1,9,12]
Conflicting evidence exists regarding the linkage to some of these loci. Data on the proposed phenotype associated with each locus are often limited, and validation studies are needed to firmly establish associations. Evidence suggests that many of the prostate cancer risk loci discovered via linkage analysis account for disease in a small subset of families, which is consistent with the concept that prostate cancer exhibits locus heterogeneity.
Linkage analyses in various familial phenotypes
Linkage studies have also been performed in specific populations or with specific clinical parameters to identify population-specific susceptibility genes or genes influencing disease phenotypes.
The African American Hereditary Prostate Cancer study conducted a genome-wide linkage study of 77 families with four or more affected men. Multipoint HLOD scores of 1.3 to less than 2.0 were observed using markers that map to 11q22, 17p11, and Xq21. Analysis of the 16 families with more than six men with prostate cancer provided evidence for two additional loci: 2p21 (multipoint HLOD score = 1.08) and 22q12 (multipoint HLOD score = 0.91).[13,15] A smaller linkage study that included 15 African American hereditary prostate cancer families from the southeastern and southcentral Louisiana region identified suggestive linkage for prostate cancer at 2p16 (HLOD = 1.97) and 12q24 (HLOD = 2.21) using a 6,000 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) platform.[16] Additional studies that include a larger number of African American families are needed to confirm these findings.
In an effort to identify loci contributing to prostate cancer aggressiveness, linkage analyses have been performed in families with clinically high-risk features such as: Gleason grade 7 or higher, PSA of 20 ng/mL or higher, regional or distant cancer stage at diagnosis, or death from metastatic prostate cancer before age 65 years. One study of 123 families with two or more affected family members with aggressive prostate cancer discovered linkage at chromosome 22q11 and 22q12.3-q13.1.[5] These findings suggest that using a clinically defined phenotype may facilitate finding prostate cancer susceptibility genes. A fine-mapping study of 14 high-risk prostate cancer families has subsequently narrowed the genomic region of interest to an 880-kb region at 22q12.3.[17] Another linkage analysis utilizing a higher resolution marker set in 348 families with aggressive prostate cancer found 8q24 to be a region with strong evidence of linkage.[18] Additional regions of linkage with aggressive disease with LOD scores of 2 or higher included 1q43, 2q35, and 12q24.31. No candidate genes have been identified.
Case-Control Studies
A case-control study evaluates factors of interest to assess for association with a condition. The design involves cases with a condition of interest, such as a specific disease or genetic variant, and a control sample without that condition. In most cases, researchers seek to match cases and controls with as many characteristics as possible (e.g., age, gender, and ethnicity) in order to isolate a particular genetic variant as the sole focus of interrogation. Limitations of case-control design with regard to identifying genetic factors include the following:[19,20]
- Stratification of the populations being studied (i.e., known or unknown population-based differences between cases and controls that could result in false-positive associations).[21]
- Genetic heterogeneity (i.e., various alleles or loci beyond those under investigation can result in a similar phenotype).
- The high prevalence of the disease in the population, potentially affecting the purity of the control arm.
- Lack of appropriate statistical power to confidently declare an association.
Because of potential confounders in this line of inquiry, validation in independent datasets is required to establish a true association.[19,20]
Androgen receptor (AR) gene variants have been examined in relation to both prostate cancer risk and disease progression. The AR gene is a logical gene to interrogate because it is expressed during all stages of prostate carcinogenesis and is routinely overexpressed in advanced disease.[22,23] Further, depletion of an AR signal reliably leads to prostate cancer regression. Germline variants at the AR locus have been extensively studied. For example, the length of the polymorphic trinucleotide CAG and GGN microsatellite repeats in exon 1 of the AR gene appear to vary in the population and early studies suggested a possible connection to prostate cancer risk.[22,24-34] However, no germline variant at the AR locus has been definitively associated with the disease.[35]
Molecular epidemiology studies have also examined genetic polymorphisms of the SRD5A2 gene, which is involved in the androgen metabolism cascade. Two isozymes of 5-alpha-reductase exist. The gene that codes for 5-alpha-reductase type II (SRD5A2) is located on chromosome 2. It is expressed in the prostate, where testosterone is converted irreversibly to dihydrotestosterone by 5-alpha-reductase type II.[36] Evidence suggests that 5-alpha-reductase type II activity is reduced in populations at lower risk of prostate cancer, including Chinese and Japanese men.[37,38] Several case-control studies have been performed, leading to well-powered meta-analyses, which have failed to demonstrate a clear association between variation of this gene and prostate cancer risk.[39-43]
Other investigators have explored the potential contribution of the variation in genes involved in the estrogen pathway. A Swedish population study of 1,415 prostate cancer cases and 801 age-matched controls examined the association of SNPs in the estrogen receptor-beta (ER-beta) gene and prostate cancer. One SNP in the promoter region of ER-beta, rs2987983, was associated with an overall prostate cancer risk of 1.23 and 1.35 for localized disease.[44] Other ER-beta polymorphisms have been reported as associated with modest risk.[45-47] ER-alpha gene variants have also been investigated and some studies have suggested a possible connection with prostate cancer. Given the lack of a convincing statistical signal, any positive associations from these studies require replication in larger datasets.
Germline pathogenic variants in the tumor suppressor gene E-cadherin (CDH1) cause a hereditary form of gastric carcinoma. A SNP designated -160C/A, located in the promoter region of CDH1, has been found to alter the transcriptional activity of this gene.[48] Because somatic pathogenic variants in CDH1 have been implicated in the development of invasive malignancies in a number of different cancers,[49] investigators have searched for evidence that this functionally significant promoter might be a modifier of cancer risk. A meta-analysis of 47 case-control studies in 16 cancer types included ten prostate cancer cohorts (3,570 cases and 3,304 controls). The odds ratio of developing prostate cancer among risk allele carriers was 1.33 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.11–1.60).[50] A subsequent meta-analysis confirmed a modest association with the CDH1 -160C/A polymorphism.[51] Additional studies are required to determine whether this finding is reproducible and biologically and clinically important.
Several other gene groups have been the focus of case-control studies, including the steroid hormone pathway,[52,53] toll-like receptor genes,[54-62] the folate pathway,[63] p53,[64] and several others.[65-73]
Case-control studies assessed site-specific prostate cancer susceptibility in the following genes: EMSY, KLF6, AMACR, NBN, CHEK2, AR, SRD5A2, ER-beta, CDH1, and the toll-like receptor genes. The clinical validity and utility of genetic testing for any of these genes to assess risk has not been established. Validation and prospective series are needed in order to prove clinical utility.
Admixture Mapping
Admixture mapping is a method used to identify genetic variants associated with traits and/or diseases in individuals with mixed ancestry.[74] This approach is most effective when applied to individuals whose admixture was recent and consists of two populations who had previously been separated for thousands of years. The genomes of such individuals are a mosaic, comprised of large blocks from each ancestral locale. The technique takes advantage of a difference in disease incidence in one ancestral group compared with another. Genetic risk loci are presumed to reside in regions enriched for the ancestral group with higher incidence. Successful mapping depends on the availability of population-specific genetic markers associated with ancestry, and on the number of generations since admixture.[75,76]
Admixture mapping is a particularly attractive method for identifying genetic loci associated with increased prostate cancer risk among African Americans. African American men are at higher risk of developing prostate cancer than are men of European ancestry, and the genomes of African American men are mosaics of regions from Africa and regions from Europe. It is therefore hypothesized that inherited variants accounting for the difference in incidence between the two groups must reside in regions enriched for African ancestry. In prostate cancer admixture studies, genetic markers for ancestry were genotyped genome-wide in African American cases and controls in a search for areas enriched for African ancestry in the men with prostate cancer. Admixture studies have identified the following chromosomal regions associated with prostate cancer:
- 7q31 (Z-score, 4.6) [77]
An advantage of this approach is that recent admixtures result in long stretches of linkage disequilibrium (up to hundreds of thousands of base pairs) of one particular ancestry.[79] As a result, fewer markers are needed to search for genetic variants associated with specific diseases, such as prostate cancer, than the number of markers needed for successful GWAS.[75] (Refer to the GWAS section of this summary for more information.)
Genome-wide Association Studies (GWAS)
Overview
- GWAS can identify inherited genetic variants that influence a specific phenotype, such as risk of a particular disease.
- For complex diseases, such as prostate cancer, risk of developing the disease is the product of multiple genetic and environmental factors; each individual factor contributes relatively little to overall risk.
- To date, GWAS have discovered more than 100 common genetic variants associated with prostate cancer risk.
- Individuals can be genotyped for all known prostate cancer risk markers relatively easily; but, to date, studies have not demonstrated that this information substantially refines risk estimates from commonly used variables, such as family history.
- The clinical relevance of variants identified from GWAS remains unclear.
Introduction to GWAS
Genome-wide searches have successfully identified susceptibility alleles for many complex diseases,[80] including prostate cancer. This approach can be contrasted with linkage analysis, which searches for genetic risk variants co-segregating within families that have a high prevalence of disease. Linkage analyses are designed to uncover rare, highly penetrant variants that segregate in predictable heritance patterns (e.g., autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, X-linked, and mitochondrial). GWAS, on the other hand, are best suited to identify multiple, common, low-penetrance genetic polymorphisms. GWAS are conducted under the assumption that the genetic underpinnings of complex phenotypes, such as prostate cancer, are governed by many alleles, each conferring modest risk. Most genetic polymorphisms genotyped in GWAS are common, with minor allele frequencies greater than 1% to 5% within a given ancestral population (e.g., men of European ancestry). GWAS survey all common inherited variants across the genome, searching for alleles that are associated with incidence of a given disease or phenotype.[81,82] The strong correlation between many alleles located close to one another on a given chromosome (called linkage disequilibrium) allows one to “scan” the genome without having to test all tens of millions of known SNPs. GWAS can test approximately 1 million to 5 million SNPs and ascertain almost all common inherited variants in the genome.
In a GWAS, allele frequency is compared for each SNP between cases and controls. Promising signals–in which allele frequencies deviate significantly in case compared to control populations–are validated in replication cohorts. In order to have adequate statistical power to identify variants associated with a phenotype, large numbers of cases and controls, typically thousands of each, are studied. Because 1 million SNPs are typically evaluated in a GWAS, false-positive findings are expected to occur frequently when standard statistical thresholds are used. Therefore, stringent statistical rules are used to declare a positive finding, usually using a threshold of P < 1 × 10-7.[83-85]
To date, over 100 variants associated with prostate cancer have been identified by well-powered GWAS and validated in independent cohorts (refer to the National Human Genome Research Institute GWAS catalog and [86]).[87] These studies have revealed convincing associations between specific inherited variants and prostate cancer risk. In addition, men with early-onset prostate cancer have a higher cumulative number of risk alleles compared with older prostate cancer cases and compared with public controls.[88] However, the findings should be qualified with a few important considerations:
- GWAS reported thus far have been designed to identify genetic polymorphisms that are relatively common in the population. It is very unlikely that an allele with high frequency in the population by itself contributes substantially to cancer risk. This, coupled with the polygenic nature of prostate tumorigenesis, means that the contribution by any single variant identified by GWAS to date is quite small, generally with an OR for disease risk of less than 1.3. In addition, despite extensive genome-wide interrogation of common polymorphisms in tens of thousands of cases and controls, GWAS findings to date do not account for even half of the genetic component of prostate cancer risk.[86,89,90]
- Variants uncovered by GWAS are not likely to be the ones directly contributing to disease risk. As mentioned above, SNPs exist in linkage disequilibrium blocks and are merely proxies for a set of variants—both known and previously undiscovered—within a given block. The causal allele is located somewhere within that linkage disequilibrium block.
- Admixture by groups of different ancestry can confound GWAS findings (i.e., a statistically significant finding could reflect a disproportionate number of subjects in the cases versus controls, rather than a true association with disease). Therefore, GWAS subjects, by design, comprise only one ancestral group. As a result, some populations remain underrepresented in genome-wide analyses.
The implications of these points are discussed in greater detail below. Additional detail can be found elsewhere.[91]
Susceptibility loci identified in GWAS
Beginning in 2006, multiple genome-wide studies seeking associations with prostate cancer risk converged on the same chromosomal locus, 8q24. The population-attributable risk of prostate cancer from these alleles was 8%. The results were replicated in European American, African American, Icelandic, and Swedish populations.[92- 105] In all, approximately nine genetic polymorphisms, all independently associated with disease, reside within five distinct 8q24 risk regions.[104,105]
Since the discovery of prostate cancer risk loci at 8q24, more than 100 variants at other chromosomal risk loci similarly have been identified by multistage GWAS comprised of thousands of cases and controls and validated in independent cohorts. The most convincing associations reported to date for men of European ancestry are annotated in the National Human Genome Research Institute GWAS catalog.
GWAS in populations of non-European ancestry
Most prostate cancer GWAS data generated to date have been derived from populations of European descent. This shortcoming is profound, considering that linkage disequilibrium structure, SNP frequencies, and incidence of disease differ across ancestral groups. To provide meaningful genetic data to all patients, well-designed, adequately powered GWAS must be aimed at specific ethnic groups.[106] Most work in this regard has focused on African American, Chinese, and Japanese men. The most convincing associations reported to date for men of non-European ancestry are annotated in the National Human Genome Research Institute GWAS catalog.
The African American population is of particular interest because American men with African ancestry are at higher risk of prostate cancer than any other group. In addition, inherited variation at the 8q24 risk locus appears to contribute to differences in African American and European American incidence of disease.[78] A handful of studies have sought to determine whether GWAS findings in men of European ancestry are applicable to men of African ancestry. One study interrogated 28 known prostate cancer risk loci via fine mapping in 3,425 African American cases and 3,290 African American controls.[107] Another study examined 82 previously reported risk variants in 4,853 prostate cancer cases and 4,678 controls.[108] The majority of risk alleles (approximately 83%) are shared across African American and European American populations.
Statistically well-powered GWAS have also been launched to examine inherited cancer risk in Japanese and Chinese populations. Investigators discovered that these populations share many risk regions observed in African American men in other studies.[109-111] Additionally, risk regions that are unique to these ancestral groups were identified. Ongoing work in larger cohorts will validate and expand upon these findings.
Clinical application of GWAS findings
Because the variants discovered by GWAS are markers of risk, there has been great interest in using genotype as a screening tool to predict the development of prostate cancer. As increasing numbers of risk SNPs have been discovered, they have been applied to clinical cohorts alongside traditional variables such as PSA and family history. An initial study of the first five known risk SNPs could not demonstrate that they added clinically meaningful data.[112] In later trials, larger risk-SNP panels also could not demonstrate usefulness for a large proportion of the screening population. However, the small subset of men carrying large numbers of risk alleles, especially those with positive family histories, were at appreciably high risk of developing prostate cancer.[112,113]
In July 2012, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) published a report that sought to address the clinical utility of germline genotyping of prostate cancer risk markers discovered by GWAS.[114] Largely on the basis of the evidence from the studies described above, AHRQ concluded that established prostate cancer risk SNPs have “poor discriminative ability” to identify individuals at risk of developing the disease. Similarly, the authors of another study estimated that the contribution of GWAS polymorphisms in determining the risk of developing prostate cancer will be modest, even as meta-analyses or larger studies uncover additional common risk alleles (alleles carried by >1%–5% of individuals within the population).[115]
By 2014, approximately 100 bona fide prostate cancer risk variants had been annotated. A polygenic risk score comprising the full complement of known risk SNPs has been proposed that could account for a 2.9-fold increase in prostate cancer risk among men in the top 10% risk stratum and a 5.7-fold risk increase among men in top 1% risk stratum, compared with the population average. The authors concluded that targeted germline genetic testing, perhaps focusing on men with a family history of prostate cancer, may help improve the accuracy of PSA screening.[86] The application of a similar genetic score in the placebo arm of the Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial demonstrated that genotypes across multiple risk SNPs modestly supplement family history information when stratifying patients for prostate cancer risk.[116] Larger cohorts have validated the finding that those at the extremes of risk allele status carry appreciably greater or less prostate cancer risk, though these subsets represent a very small fraction of the overall screening population.[117,118] A 2016 analysis of a collection of risk variants suggested an association between cumulative risk allele status and early-onset prostate cancer.[119]
GWAS findings to date account for only 33% to 50% of heritable risk of disease. Research is ongoing to uncover the remaining portion of genetic risk. This includes the discovery of rarer alleles with higher ORs for risk.[120]
In addition, other genetic polymorphisms, such as copy number variants, are becoming increasingly amenable to testing. As the full picture of inherited prostate cancer risk becomes more complete, it is hoped that germline information will become clinically useful. Finally, GWAS are providing more insight into the mechanism of prostate cancer risk. Notably, almost all reported prostate cancer risk alleles reside in nonprotein-coding regions of the genome; however, the underlying biological mechanism of disease susceptibility was initially unclear. It is now apparent that a large proportion of risk variants affect the activity of regulatory elements and, in turn, distal genes.[121-124,124-129] As GWAS elucidate these networks, it is hoped that new therapies and chemopreventive strategies will follow.
Modified approaches to GWAS
A 2012 study used a novel approach to identify polymorphisms associated with risk.[130] On the basis of the well-established principle that the AR plays a prominent role in prostate tumorigenesis, the investigators targeted SNPs that reside at sites where the AR binds to DNA. They leveraged data from previous studies that mapped thousands of AR binding sites genome-wide in prostate cancer cell lines to select SNPs to genotype in the Johns Hopkins Hospital cohort of 1,964 cases and 3,172 controls and the Cancer Genetic Markers of Susceptibility cohort of 1,172 cases and 1,157 controls. This modified GWAS revealed a SNP (rs4919743) located at the KRT8 locus at 12q13.13—a locus previously implicated in cancer development—associated with prostate cancer risk, with an OR of 1.22 (95% CI, 1.13–1.32). The study is notable for its use of a reasonable hypothesis and prior data to guide a genome-wide search for risk variants. Other approaches include evaluating SNPs implicated in a phenotype other than prostate cancer.[131,132]
Conclusions
Although the statistical evidence for an association between genetic variation at these loci and prostate cancer risk is overwhelming, the clinical relevance of the variants and the mechanism(s) by which they lead to increased risk are unclear and will require further characterization. Additionally, these loci are associated with very modest risk estimates and explain only a fraction of overall inherited risk. Further work will include genome-wide analysis of rarer alleles catalogued via sequencing efforts, such as the 1000 Genomes Project.[133] Disease-associated alleles with frequencies of less than 1% in the population may prove to be more highly penetrant and clinically useful. In addition, further work is needed to describe the landscape of genetic risk in non-European populations. Finally, until the individual and collective influences of genetic risk alleles are evaluated prospectively, their clinical utility will remain difficult to fully assess.
Inherited Variants Associated With Prostate Cancer Aggressiveness
Prostate cancer is biologically and clinically heterogeneous. Many tumors are indolent and are successfully managed with observation alone. Other tumors are quite aggressive and prove deadly. Several variables are used to determine prostate cancer aggressiveness at the time of diagnosis, such as Gleason score and PSA, but these are imperfect. Additional markers are needed because sound treatment decisions depend on accurate prognostic information. Germline genetic variants are attractive markers because they are present, easily detectable, and static throughout life.
Findings to date regarding inherited risk of aggressive disease are considered preliminary. As described below, germline SNPs associated with prostate cancer aggressiveness are derived primarily from three methods of analysis: 1) annotation of common variants within candidate risk genes; 2) assessment of known overall prostate cancer risk SNPs for aggressiveness; and 3) GWAS for prostate cancer aggressiveness. Further work is needed to validate findings and assess these associations prospectively.
Like studies of the genetics of overall prostate cancer risk, initial studies of inherited risk of aggressive prostate cancer focused on polymorphisms in candidate genes.[134-140] Next, as GWAS revealed prostate cancer risk SNPs, several research teams sought to determine whether certain overall risk SNPs were also associated with aggressiveness.[141-148]
There has been great interest in launching more unbiased, genome-wide searches for inherited variants associated with indolent versus aggressive prostate cancer.
Associations between inherited variants and prostate cancer aggressiveness have been reported. A multistage, case-only GWAS led by the National Cancer Institute examined 12,518 prostate cancer cases and discovered an association between genotype and Gleason score at two polymorphisms: rs35148638 at 5q14.3 (RASA1, P = 6.49 × 10-9) and rs78943174 at 3q26.31 (NAALADL2, P = 4.18 × 10-8).[149] Although the associations discovered in this trial may provide valuable insight into the biology of high-grade disease, it is unclear whether they will prove clinically useful. This study raises the issue of the definition of “prostate cancer aggressiveness.” Gleason score is used as a prognostic marker but is not a perfect surrogate for prostate cancer–specific survival or overall survival.
A few GWAS designed specifically to focus on prostate cancer subjects with documented disease-related outcomes have been launched. In one study—a genome-wide analysis in which two of the largest international prostate cancer genotyped cohorts were combined for analysis (24,023 prostate cancer cases, including 3,513 disease-specific deaths)—no SNP was significantly associated with prostate cancer–specific survival.[150] Similarly, in a smaller study assessing prostate cancer–specific mortality (196 lethal cases, 368 long-term survivors), no variants were significantly associated with outcome.[151] More recently, a GWAS was conducted across 24,023 prostate cancer patients and similarly found no significant association between genetic variants and prostate cancer survival.[149] The authors of these studies concluded that any SNP associated with prostate cancer outcome must be fairly rare in the general population (minor allele frequency below 1%).
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- Hazelett DJ, Rhie SK, Gaddis M, et al.: Comprehensive functional annotation of 77 prostate cancer risk loci. PLoS Genet 10 (1): e1004102, 2014. [PMC free article: PMC3907334] [PubMed: 24497837]
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- Feng J, Sun J, Kim ST, et al.: A genome-wide survey over the ChIP-on-chip identified androgen receptor-binding genomic regions identifies a novel prostate cancer susceptibility locus at 12q13.13. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 20 (11): 2396-403, 2011. [PMC free article: PMC3210915] [PubMed: 21960693]
- Stegeman S, Amankwah E, Klein K, et al.: A Large-Scale Analysis of Genetic Variants within Putative miRNA Binding Sites in Prostate Cancer. Cancer Discov 5 (4): 368-79, 2015. [PMC free article: PMC4390388] [PubMed: 25691096]
- Panagiotou OA, Travis RC, Campa D, et al.: A genome-wide pleiotropy scan for prostate cancer risk. Eur Urol 67 (4): 649-57, 2015. [PMC free article: PMC4359641] [PubMed: 25277271]
- 1000 Genomes Project Consortium: A map of human genome variation from population-scale sequencing. Nature 467 (7319): 1061-73, 2010. [PMC free article: PMC3042601] [PubMed: 20981092]
- Sun T, Mary LG, Oh WK, et al.: Inherited variants in the chemokine CCL2 gene and prostate cancer aggressiveness in a Caucasian cohort. Clin Cancer Res 17 (6): 1546-52, 2011. [PMC free article: PMC3060307] [PubMed: 21135144]
- Sun T, Lee GS, Oh WK, et al.: Single-nucleotide polymorphisms in p53 pathway and aggressiveness of prostate cancer in a Caucasian population. Clin Cancer Res 16 (21): 5244-51, 2010. [PMC free article: PMC2970725] [PubMed: 20855462]
- Zabaleta J, Su LJ, Lin HY, et al.: Cytokine genetic polymorphisms and prostate cancer aggressiveness. Carcinogenesis 30 (8): 1358-62, 2009. [PMC free article: PMC2718072] [PubMed: 19474090]
- Ross PL, Cheng I, Liu X, et al.: Carboxypeptidase 4 gene variants and early-onset intermediate-to-high risk prostate cancer. BMC Cancer 9: 69, 2009. [PMC free article: PMC2657151] [PubMed: 19245716]
- Henríquez-Hernández LA, Valenciano A, Foro-Arnalot P, et al.: Single nucleotide polymorphisms in DNA repair genes as risk factors associated to prostate cancer progression. BMC Med Genet 15: 143, 2014. [PMC free article: PMC4316399] [PubMed: 25540025]
- Lin DW, FitzGerald LM, Fu R, et al.: Genetic variants in the LEPR, CRY1, RNASEL, IL4, and ARVCF genes are prognostic markers of prostate cancer-specific mortality. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 20 (9): 1928-36, 2011. [PMC free article: PMC3169727] [PubMed: 21846818]
- Langeberg WJ, Kwon EM, Koopmeiners JS, et al.: Population-based study of the association of variants in mismatch repair genes with prostate cancer risk and outcomes. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 19 (1): 258-64, 2010. [PMC free article: PMC2825566] [PubMed: 20056646]
- Pomerantz MM, Werner L, Xie W, et al.: Association of prostate cancer risk Loci with disease aggressiveness and prostate cancer-specific mortality. Cancer Prev Res (Phila) 4 (5): 719-28, 2011. [PMC free article: PMC3811002] [PubMed: 21367958]
- Bensen JT, Xu Z, Smith GJ, et al.: Genetic polymorphism and prostate cancer aggressiveness: a case-only study of 1,536 GWAS and candidate SNPs in African-Americans and European-Americans. Prostate 73 (1): 11-22, 2013. [PMC free article: PMC3480543] [PubMed: 22549899]
- He Y, Gu J, Strom S, et al.: The prostate cancer susceptibility variant rs2735839 near KLK3 gene is associated with aggressive prostate cancer and can stratify gleason score 7 patients. Clin Cancer Res 20 (19): 5133-9, 2014. [PMC free article: PMC4185411] [PubMed: 25274378]
- Helfand BT, Roehl KA, Cooper PR, et al.: Associations of prostate cancer risk variants with disease aggressiveness: results of the NCI-SPORE Genetics Working Group analysis of 18,343 cases. Hum Genet 134 (4): 439-50, 2015. [PMC free article: PMC4586077] [PubMed: 25715684]
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Clinical Application of Genetic Testing for Inherited Prostate Cancer
Criteria for Genetic Testing in Prostate Cancer
The criteria for consideration of genetic testing for prostate cancer susceptibility varies depending on the emerging guidelines and expert opinion consensus as summarized in Table 2.[1-5] Identification of men for inherited prostate cancer genetic testing is based upon family history criteria, personal/disease characteristics, and tumor sequencing results. Actual genes to test vary on the basis of specific guidelines or consensus conference recommendations. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian Cancer guideline is focused on BRCA1/BRCA2 testing on the basis of various testing criteria.[3] The NCCN Prostate Cancer treatment guideline states to test BRCA1/BRCA2, ATM, CHEK2, PALB2, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2 for men meeting specific testing indications.[4] A 2017 consensus conference addressed the role of genetic testing for inherited prostate cancer.[1] Family history–based indications for testing included testing for BRCA1/BRCA2, HOXB13, or DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes. Tumor sequencing with potential findings of germline variants in BRCA1/BRCA2 or DNA MMR genes, as well as other genes, is recommended for confirmatory germline testing. Somatic findings for which germline testing is considered include:
- Somatic variants that are associated with germline susceptibility.
- Hypermutated tumors, which are indicative of DNA MMR.
- Chromosome rearrangements in specific tumors.
- High-variant allele frequency (percent of sequence reads that have the identified variant). Variant allele frequency can be altered for reasons not associated with germline variants such as loss of heterozygosity, ploidy (copy number variants), tumor heterogeneity, and tumor sample purity.[6]
HOXB13 and ATM had lower level of consensus for testing on the basis of tumor sequencing. Men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer were recommended to undergo genetic testing for BRCA1/BRCA2 (higher level of consensus) and ATM (moderate level of consensus). A second consensus conference focused on advanced prostate cancer stated that among panelists that recommended genetic testing on the basis of various criteria, there was agreement to use large panel testing including homologous recombination and DNA MMR genes.[2] Available genetic testing indications from guidelines and consensus conferences are shown in Table 2.
Table 2. Indications for Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer Risk
Philadelphia Prostate Cancer Consensus Conference (Giri et al. 2018)a [1] | NCCN Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian (Version 3.2019)b [3] | NCCN Prostate Cancer (Version 2.2019)c [4] | NCCN Prostate Cancer Early Detection (Version 2.2019)d [5] | European Advanced Prostate Cancer Consensus Conference (Gillessen et al. 2017)e [2] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Family History Criteria | All men with prostate cancer from families meeting established testing or syndromic criteria for HBOC; hereditary prostate cancer; and Lynch syndrome | Personal history of Gleason score ≥7 prostate cancer with: ≥1 biologic relative with ovarian, pancreatic, or metastatic prostate cancer at any age or breast cancer <50 y; or ≥2 biologic relatives with breast or prostate cancer (any grade) at any age; or Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry | ≥3 cancers on the same side of the family, especially diagnoses ≤50 y: bile duct, breast, colorectal, endometrial, gastric, kidney, melanoma, ovarian, pancreatic, prostate, small bowel, or urothelial cancer | None provided | Positive family history of prostate cancer |
Men affected with prostate cancer with >2 close biologic relatives with a cancer associated with HBOC; hereditary prostate cancer, and Lynch syndrome | Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry | Positive family history of other cancer syndromes (HBOC and/or pancreatic cancer and/or Lynch syndrome) | |||
Prostate cancer diagnosed <55 y in an FDR | Brother, father, or multiple family members with prostate cancer <60 y | ||||
Death <60 y from prostate cancer in an FDR | Brother, father, or multiple family members who died of prostate cancer | ||||
Disease Characteristics | All men with metastatic prostate cancer | Personal history of metastatic prostate cancer (radiographic evidence or biopsy proven) | Men with high-/very-high-risk clinically localized, regional, or metastatic disease and any men with prostate cancer with intraductal histology | None provided | Men with newly diagnosed metastatic prostate cancer (62% of panel voted in favor of genetic counseling/testing in a minority of selected patients) |
Prostate cancer diagnosed <55 y | Prostate cancer diagnosed <60 y | ||||
Tumor Characteristics | Men with prostate cancer whose somatic testing reveals the possibility of a germline variant in a cancer risk gene | BRCA1/BRCA2 somatic variant detected in the absence of germline testing | Consider tumor testing for homologous recombination gene pathogenic variants and for MSI or dMMR in regional and metastatic disease | None provided | |
Screening in BRCA1 Carriers | Follow NCCN Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian guidelines | Consider prostate cancer screening starting at age 45 y | None provided | Consider beginning shared decision making about PSA screening at age 40 y | |
Interval of screening determined by baseline PSA level as specified in NCCN Prostate Cancer Early Detection Version 2.2019 | Consider screening at annual intervals rather than every other year | ||||
Screening in BRCA2 Carriers | Baseline PSA >40 y or 10 years prior to the earliest age of prostate cancer in the family | Recommend prostate cancer screening starting at age 45 y | None provided | Consider beginning shared decision making about PSA screening at age 40 y | |
Interval of screening determined by baseline PSA level | Interval of screening determined by baseline PSA level as specified in NCCN Prostate Cancer Early Detection Version 2.2019 | Consider screening at annual intervals rather than every other year | |||
Screening in HOXB13 Carriers | Baseline PSA >40 y or 10 years prior to the earliest age of prostate cancer in the family | None provided | None provided | None provided | |
Interval of screening determined by baseline PSA level |
dMMR = mismatch repair deficient; FDR = first-degree relative; HBOC = hereditary breast and ovarian cancer; MSI = microsatellite instability; NCCN = National Comprehensive Cancer Network; PSA = prostate-specific antigen.
aGiri et al.: Specific genes to test include BRCA1/BRCA2, DNA MMR genes, ATM, and HOXB13 depending on various testing indications.
bNCCN Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian guideline focuses on testing for BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants.
cNCCN Prostate Cancer guideline specifies that homologous recombination gene pathogenic variants and DNA MMR gene pathogenic variants include variants in the following genes: BRCA1, BRCA2, ATM, PALB2, CHEK2, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2. Additional genes may be appropriate depending on the clinical context.
dNCCN Prostate Cancer Early Detection guideline does not specifically state which genes to test, but describes consideration of BRCA1/BRCA2 status and the status of other cancer risk genes when discussing prostate cancer screening.
eGillessen et al. endorsed the use of large panel testing including homologous recombination and DNA MMR genes.
Multigene (Panel) Testing in Prostate Cancer
Since the availability of next-generation sequencing and the elimination of patent restrictions, several clinical laboratories now offer genetic testing through multigene panels at a cost comparable to single-gene testing. A caveat is the possible finding of a variant of uncertain significance, where the clinical significance remains unknown. (Refer to the Multigene [panel] testing section in the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information about multigene testing, including genetic education and counseling considerations, and research examining the use of multigene testing.) This section summarizes the evidence for additional genes that may be on prostate cancer susceptibility panel tests.
One retrospective case series of 692 men with metastatic prostate cancer unselected for cancer family history or age at diagnosis assessed the incidence of germline pathogenic variants in 16 DNA repair genes. Pathogenic variants were identified in 11.8% (82 of 692), a rate higher than in men with localized prostate cancer (4.6%, P < .001), suggesting that genetic aberrations are more commonly observed in men with aggressive forms of disease.[7]
Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment
Genetic testing for pathogenic variants in genes with some association with prostate cancer risk is now available and has the potential to identify men at increased risk of prostate cancer. Research from selected cohorts has reported that prostate cancer risk is elevated in men with pathogenic variants in BRCA1, BRCA2, and on a smaller scale, in MMR genes. Because clinical genetic testing is available for these genes, information about risk of prostate cancer on the basis of alterations in these genes is included in this section. In addition, pathogenic variants in HOXB13 are reported to account for a small proportion of hereditary prostate cancer. This section summarizes the evidence for these genes and additional genes that may be on prostate cancer susceptibility panel tests.
BRCA1 and BRCA2
Studies of male carriers of BRCA1 [8] and BRCA2 pathogenic variants demonstrate that these individuals have a higher risk of prostate cancer and other cancers.[9] Prostate cancer in particular has been observed at higher rates in male carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants than in the general population.[10]
BRCA–associated prostate cancer risk
The risk of prostate cancer in carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants has been studied in various settings.
In an effort to clarify the relationship between BRCA pathogenic variants and prostate cancer risk, findings from several case series are summarized in Table 3.
Table 3. Case Series of BRCA Pathogenic Variants in Prostate Cancer
Study | Population | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA1) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA2) |
---|---|---|---|
BCLC (1999) [11] | BCLC family set that included 173 BRCA2 linkage– or pathogenic variant–positive families, among which there were 3,728 individuals and 333 cancersa | Not assessed | Overall: RR, 4.65 (95% CI, 3.48–6.22) |
Men <65 y: RR, 7.33 (95% CI, 4.66–11.52) | |||
Thompson et al. (2001) [12] | BCLC family set that included 164 BRCA2 pathogenic variant–positive families, among which there were 3,728 individuals and 333 cancersa | Not assessed | OCCR: RR, 0.52 (95% CI, 0.24–1.00) |
Thompson et al. (2002) [8] | BCLC family set that included 7,106 women and 4,741 men, among which 2,245 were carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants; 1,106 were tested noncarriers, and 8,496 were not tested | Overall: RR, 1.07 (95% CI, 0.75–1.54) | Not assessed |
Men younger than 65 y: RR, 1.82 (95% CI, 1.01–3.29) | |||
Mersch et al. (2015) [10] | Clinical genetics population at a single institution from 1997–2013. Compared cancer incidence with U.S. Statistics Report by CDC for general population cancer incidence. | SIR, 3.809 (95% CI, 0.766–11.13) (Not significant) | SIR, 4.89 (95% CI, 1.959–10.075) |
BCLC = Breast Cancer Linkage Consortium; CDC = Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; CI = confidence interval; OCCR = Ovarian Cancer Cluster Region; RR = relative risk; SIR = standardized incidence ratio.
aIncludes all cancers except breast, ovarian, and nonmelanoma skin cancers.
Estimates derived from the Breast Cancer Linkage Consortium may be overestimated because these data are generated from a highly select population of families ascertained for significant evidence of risk of breast cancer and ovarian cancer and suitability for linkage analysis. However, a review of the relationship between germline pathogenic variants in BRCA2 and prostate cancer risk supports the view that this gene confers a significant increase in risk among male members of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer families but that it likely plays only a small role, if any, in site-specific, multiple-case prostate cancer families.[13] In addition, the clinical validity and utility of BRCA testing solely on the basis of evidence for hereditary prostate cancer susceptibility has not been established.
One study has assessed the relationship between germline DNA repair gene pathogenic variants and metastatic prostate cancer. Of 692 men unselected for cancer family history or age at diagnosis, 5.3% (37 of 692) were found to have a BRCA2 pathogenic variant, and 0.9% (6 of 692) had a BRCA1 pathogenic variant.[7]
Prevalence of BRCA founder pathogenic variants in men with prostate cancer
Ashkenazi Jewish population
Several studies in Israel and in North America have analyzed the frequency of BRCA founder pathogenic variants among Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) men with prostate cancer.[14-16] Two specific BRCA1 pathogenic variants (185delAG and 5382insC) and one BRCA2 pathogenic variant (6174delT) are common in individuals of AJ ancestry. Carrier frequencies for these pathogenic variants in the general Jewish population are 0.9% (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.7%–1.1%) for the 185delAG pathogenic variant, 0.3% (95% CI, 0.2%–0.4%) for the 5382insC pathogenic variant, and 1.3% (95% CI, 1.0%–1.5%) for the BRCA2 6174delT pathogenic variant.[17-20] (Refer to the High-Penetrance Breast and/or Gynecologic Cancer Susceptibility Genes section in the PDQ summary on Genetics of Breast and Gynecologic Cancers for more information about BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes.) In these studies, the relative risks (RRs) were commonly greater than 1, but only a few were statistically significant. Many of these studies were not sufficiently powered to rule out a lower, but clinically significant, risk of prostate cancer in carriers of Ashkenazi BRCA founder pathogenic variants.
In the Washington Ashkenazi Study (WAS), a kin-cohort analytic approach was used to estimate the cumulative risk of prostate cancer among more than 5,000 American AJ male volunteers from the Washington, District of Columbia area who carried one of the BRCA Ashkenazi founder pathogenic variants. The cumulative risk to age 70 years was estimated to be 16% (95% CI, 4%–30%) among carriers of the founder pathogenic variants and 3.8% (95% CI, 3.3%–4.4%) among noncarriers.[20] This fourfold increase in prostate cancer risk was equal (in absolute terms) to the cumulative risk of ovarian cancer among female carriers at the same age (16% by age 70 y; 95% CI, 6%–28%). The risk of prostate cancer in male carriers in the WAS cohort was elevated by age 50 years, was statistically significantly elevated by age 67 years, and increased thereafter with age, suggesting both an overall excess in prostate cancer risk and an earlier age at diagnosis among carriers of Ashkenazi founder pathogenic variants. Prostate cancer risk differed depending on the gene, with BRCA1 pathogenic variants associated with increasing risk after age 55 to 60 years, reaching 25% by age 70 years and 41% by age 80 years. In contrast, prostate cancer risk associated with the BRCA2 pathogenic variant began to rise at later ages, reaching 5% by age 70 years and 36% by age 80 years (numeric values were provided by the author [written communication, April 2005]).
The studies summarized in Table 4 used similar case-control methods to examine the prevalence of Ashkenazi founder pathogenic variants among Jewish men with prostate cancer and found an overall positive association between carrier status of founder pathogenic variants and prostate cancer risk.
Table 4. Case-Control Studies in Ashkenazi Jewish Populations of BRCA1 and BRCA2 and Prostate Cancer Risk
Study | Cases/Controls | Pathogenic Variant Frequency (BRCA1) | Pathogenic Variant Frequency (BRCA2) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA1) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA2) | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Guisti et al. (2003) [21] | Cases: 979 consecutive AJ men from Israel diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1994 and 1995 | Cases: 16 (1.7%) | Cases: 14 (1.5%) | 185delAG: OR, 2.52 (95% CI, 1.05–6.04) | OR, 2.02 (95% CI, 0.16–5.72) | There was no evidence of unique or specific histopathology findings within the pathogenic variant–associated prostate cancers. |
Controls: Prevalence of founder pathogenic variants compared with age-matched controls >50 y with no history of prostate cancer from the WAS study and the MECC study from Israel | Controls: 11 (0.81%) | Controls: 10 (0.74% | 5282insC: OR, 0.22 (95% CI, 0.16–5.72) | |||
Kirchoff et al. (2004) [22] | Cases: 251 unselected AJ men treated for prostate cancer between 2000 and 2002 | Cases: 5 (2.0%) | Cases: 8 (3.2%) | OR, 2.20 (95% CI, 0.72–6.70) | OR, 4.78 (95% CI, 1.87–12.25) | |
Controls: 1,472 AJ men with no history of cancer | Controls: 12 (0.8%) | Controls: 16 (1.1%) | ||||
Agalliu et al. (2009) [23] | Cases: 979 AJ men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1978 and 2005 (mean and median year of diagnosis: 1996) | Cases: 12 (1.2%) | Cases: 18 (1.9%) | OR, 1.39 (95% CI, 0.60–3.22) | OR, 1.92 (95% CI, 0.91–4.07) | Gleason score 7–10 prostate cancer was more common in carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants (OR, 2.23; 95% CI, 0.84–5.86) and carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants (OR, 3.18; 95% CI, 1.62–6.24) than in controls. |
Controls: 1,251 AJ men with no history of cancer | Controls: 11 (0.9%) | Controls: 12 (1.0%) | ||||
Gallagher et al. (2010) [24] | Cases: 832 AJ men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer between 1988 and 2007 | Noncarriers: 806 (96.9%) | Noncarriers: 447 (98.5%) | OR, 0.38 (95% CI, 0.05–2.75) | OR, 3.18 (95% CI, 1.52–6.66) | The BRCA1 5382insC founder pathogenic variant was not tested in this series, so it is likely that some carriers of this pathogenic variant were not identified. Consequently, BRCA1-related risk may be underestimated. Gleason score 7–10 prostate cancer was more common in carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants (85%) than in noncarriers (57%); P = .0002. Carriers of BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants had significantly greater risk of recurrence and prostate cancer–specific death than did noncarriers. |
Cases: 6 (0.7%) | Cases: 20 (2.4%) | |||||
Controls: 454 AJ men with no history of cancer | Controls: 4 (0.9%) | Controls: 3 (0.7%) |
AJ = Ashkenazi Jewish; CI = confidence interval; MECC = Molecular Epidemiology of Colorectal Cancer; OR = odds ratio; WAS = Washington Ashkenazi Study.
These studies support the hypothesis that prostate cancer occurs excessively among carriers of AJ founder pathogenic variants and suggest that the risk may be greater among men with the BRCA2 founder pathogenic variant (6174delT) than among those with one of the BRCA1 founder pathogenic variants (185delAG; 5382insC). The magnitude of the BRCA2-associated risks differs somewhat, undoubtedly because of interstudy differences related to participant ascertainment, calendar time differences in diagnosis, and analytic methods. Some data suggest that BRCA-related prostate cancer has a significantly worse prognosis than prostate cancer that occurs among noncarriers.[24]
Other populations
The association between prostate cancer and pathogenic variants in BRCA1 and BRCA2 has also been studied in other populations. Table 5 summarizes studies that used case-control methods to examine the prevalence of BRCA pathogenic variants among men with prostate cancer from other varied populations.
Table 5. Case-Control Studies in Varied Populations of BRCA1 and BRCA2 and Prostate Cancer Risk
Study | Cases/Controls | Pathogenic Variant Frequency (BRCA1) | Pathogenic Variant Frequency (BRCA2) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA1) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA2) | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Johannesdottir et al. (1996) [25] | Cases: 75 Icelandic men diagnosed with prostate cancer <65 y, between 1983 and 1992, with available archival tissue blocks | Not assessed | Cases: 999del5 (2.7%) | Not assessed | 999del5: RR, 2.5 (95% CI, 0.49–18.4) | |
Controls: 499 randomly selected DNA samples from the Icelandic National Diet Survey | Controls: (0.4%) | |||||
Eerola et al. (2001) [26] | Cases: 107 Finnish hereditary breast cancer families defined as having three first- or second-degree relatives with breast or ovarian cancer at any age | Not assessed | Not assessed | SIR, 1.0 (95% CI, 0.0–3.9) | SIR, 4.9 (95% CI, 1.8–11.0) | |
Controls: Finnish population based on gender, age, and calendar period–specific incidence rates | ||||||
Cybulski et al. (2013) [27] | Cases: 3,750 Polish men with prostate cancer unselected for age or family history and diagnosed between 1999 and 2012 | Cases: 14 (0.4%) | Not assessed | Any BRCA1 pathogenic variant: OR, 0.9 (95% CI, 0.4–1.8) | Not assessed | Prostate cancer risk was greater in familial cases and cases diagnosed <60 y. |
4153delA: OR, 5.3 (95% CI, 0.6–45.2) | ||||||
Controls: 3,956 Polish men with no history of cancer aged 23–90 y | Controls: 17 (0.4%) | 5382insC: OR, 0.5 (95% CI, 0.2–1.3) | ||||
C61G: OR, 1.1 (95% CI, 1.6–2.2) |
CI = confidence interval; OR = odds ratio; RR = relative risk; SIR = standardized incidence ratio.
These data suggest that prostate cancer risk in carriers of BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants varies with the location of the pathogenic variant (i.e., there is a correlation between genotype and phenotype).[25,26,28] These observations might explain some of the inconsistencies encountered in prior studies of these associations, because varied populations may have differences in the proportion of individuals with specific BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants.
Several case series have also explored the role of BRCA1 and BRCA2 pathogenic variants and prostate cancer risk.
Table 6. Case Series of BRCA1 and BRCA2 and Prostate Cancer Risk
Study | Population | Pathogenic Variant Frequency (BRCA1) | Pathogenic Variant Frequency (BRCA2) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA1) | Prostate Cancer Risk (BRCA2) | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Agalliu et al. (2007) [29] | 290 men (white, n = 257; African American, n = 33) diagnosed with prostate cancer <55 y and unselected for family history | Not assessed | 2 (0.69%) | Not assessed | RR, 7.8 (95% CI, 1.8–9.4) | No pathogenic variants were found in African American men. |
The two men with a pathogenic variant reported no family history of breast cancer or ovarian cancer. | ||||||
Agalliu et al. (2007) [30] | 266 individuals from 194 hereditary prostate cancer families, including 253 men affected with prostate cancer; median age at prostate cancer diagnosis, 58 y | Not assessed | 0 (0%) | Not assessed | Not assessed | 31 nonsynonymous variations were identified; no truncating or pathogenic variants were detected. |
Tryggvadóttir et al. (2007) [31] | 527 men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1955 and 2004 | Not assessed | 30/527 (5.7%) carried the Icelandic founder pathogenic variant 999del5 | Not assessed | Not assessed | The BRCA2 999del5 pathogenic variant was associated with a lower mean age at prostate cancer diagnosis (69 vs. 74 y; P = .002) |
Kote-Jarai et al. (2011) [32] | 1,832 men diagnosed with prostate cancer between ages 36 and 88 y who participated in the UK Genetic Prostate Cancer Study | Not assessed | Overall: 19/1,832 (1.03%) | Not assessed | RR, 8.6a (95% CI, 5.1–12.6) | MLPA was not used; therefore, the pathogenic variant frequency may be an underestimate, given the inability to detect large genomic rearrangements. |
Prostate cancer diagnosed ≤55 y: 8/632 (1.27%) | ||||||
Leongamornlert et al. (2012) [33] | 913 men with prostate cancer who participated in the UK Genetic Prostate Cancer Study; included 821 cases diagnosed between ages 36 and 65 y, regardless of family history, and 92 cases diagnosed >65 y with a family history of prostate cancer | All cases: 4/886 (0.45%) | Not assessed | RR, 3.75a (95% CI, 1.02–9.6) | Not assessed | Quality-control assessment after sequencing excluded 27 cases, resulting in 886 cases included in the final analysis. |
Cases ≤65 y: 3/802 (0.37%) |
CI = confidence interval; MLPA = multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification; RR = relative risk; UK = United Kingdom.
aEstimate calculated using RR data in UK general population.
These case series confirm that pathogenic variants in BRCA1 and BRCA2 do not play a significant role in hereditary prostate cancer. However, germline pathogenic variants in BRCA2 account for some cases of early-onset prostate cancer, although this is estimated to be less than 1% of early-onset prostate cancers in the United States.[29]
Prostate cancer aggressiveness in carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants
The studies summarized in Table 7 used similar case-control methods to examine features of prostate cancer aggressiveness among men with prostate cancer found to harbor a BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variant.
Table 7. Case-Control Studies of BRCA1 and BRCA2 and Prostate Cancer Aggressiveness
Study | Cases / Controls | Gleason Scorea | PSAa | Tumor Stage or Gradea | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tryggvadóttir et al. (2007) [31] | Cases: 30 men diagnosed with prostate cancer who were carriers of BRCA2 999del5 founder pathogenic variants | Gleason score 7–10: | Not assessed | Stage IV at diagnosis: | |
— Cases: 84% | — Cases: 55.2% | ||||
Controls: 59 men with prostate cancer matched by birth and diagnosis year and confirmed not to carry the BRCA2 999del5 pathogenic variant | — Controls: 52.7% | — Controls: 24.6% | |||
Agalliu et al. (2009) [23] | Cases: 979 AJ men diagnosed with prostate cancer between 1978 and 2005 (mean and median year of diagnosis, 1996) | Gleason score 7–10: | Not assessed | Not assessed | |
— BRCA1 185delAG pathogenic variant: OR, 3.54 (95% CI, 1.22–10.31) | |||||
Controls: 1,251 AJ men with no history of cancer | — BRCA2 6174delT pathogenic variant: OR, 3.18 (95% CI, 1.37–7.34) | ||||
Edwards et al. (2010) [34] | Cases: 21 men diagnosed with prostate cancer who harbored a BRCA2 pathogenic variant; 6 with early-onset disease (≤55 y) from a UK prostate cancer study and 15 unselected for age at diagnosis from a UK clinical series | Not assessed | PSA ≥25 ng/mL: HR, 1.39 (95% CI, 1.04–1.86) | Stage T3: HR, 1.19 (95% CI, 0.68–2.05) | |
Stage T4: HR, 1.87 (95% CI, 1.00–3.48) | |||||
Grade 2: HR, 2.24 (95% CI, 1.03–4.88) | |||||
Controls: 1,587 age- and stage-matched men with prostate cancer | Grade 3: HR, 3.94 (95% CI, 1.78–8.73) | ||||
Gallagher et al. (2010) [24] | Cases: 832 AJ men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer between 1988 and 2007, of which there were 6 carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants and 20 carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants | Gleason score 7–10: | Not assessed | Not assessed | The BRCA1 5382insC founder pathogenic variant was not tested in this series. |
Controls: 454 AJ men with no history of cancer | — BRCA2 6174delT pathogenic variant: HR, 2.63 (95% CI, 1.23–5.6; P = .001) | ||||
Thorne et al. (2011) [35] | Cases: 40 men diagnosed with prostate cancer who were carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants from 30 familial breast cancer families from Australia and New Zealand | Gleason score ≥8: | PSA 10–100 ng/mL: | Stage ≥pT3 at presentation: | Carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants were more likely to have high-risk disease by D’Amico criteria than were noncarriers (77.5% vs. 58.7%, P = .05). |
— BRCA2 pathogenic variants: 35% (14/40) | — BRCA2 pathogenic variants: 44.7% (17/38) | ||||
— BRCA2 pathogenic variants: 65.8% (25/38) | — Controls: 27.9% (27/97) | ||||
PSA >101 ng/mL: | |||||
Controls: 97 men from 89 familial breast cancer families from Australia and New Zealand with prostate cancer and no BRCA pathogenic variant found in the family | — Controls: 33.0% (25/97) | — BRCA2 pathogenic variants: 10% (4/40) | — Controls: 22.6% (21/97) | ||
— Controls: 2.1% (2/97) | |||||
Castro et al. (2013) [36] | Cases: 2,019 men diagnosed with prostate cancer from the UK, of whom 18 were carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants and 61 were carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants | Gleason score >8: | BRCA1 median PSA: 8.9 (range, 0.7–3,000) | Stage ≥pT3 at presentation: | Nodal metastasis and distant metastasis were higher in men with a BRCA pathogenic variant than in controls. |
— BRCA1 pathogenic variants: 27.8% (5/18) | — BRCA1: 38.9% (7/18) | ||||
— BRCA2 pathogenic variants: 37.7% (23/61) | BRCA2 median PSA: 15.1 (range, 0.5–761) | — BRCA2 : 49.2% (30/61) | |||
Controls: 1,940 men who were BRCA1/BRCA2 noncarriers | — Controls 15.4% (299/1,940) | Controls median PSA: 11.3 (range, 0.2–7,800) | — Controls: 31.7% (616/1,940) | ||
Akbari et al. (2014) [37] | Cases: 4,187 men who underwent prostate biopsy for elevated PSA or abnormal exam, including 26 men with at least one BRCA coding pathogenic variant (all 26 coding exons of BRCA were sequenced for polymorphisms) | Gleason score 7–10: | Cases median PSA: 56.3 | Not fully assessed in cases and controls | The 12-year survival for men with a BRCA2 pathogenic variant was inferior to that of men without a BRCA2 pathogenic variant (61.8% vs. 94.3%; P < 10−4). Among the men with high-grade disease (Gleason 7–9), the presence of a BRCA2 pathogenic variant was associated with an HR of 4.38 (95% CI, 1.99–9.62; P < .0001) after adjusting for age and PSA level. |
— Cases 96% | |||||
Controls: 1,878 men with no BRCA coding pathogenic variants (all 26 coding exons of BRCA were sequenced for polymorphisms) | — Controls 54% | Controls median PSA: 13.3 |
AJ = Ashkenazi Jewish; CI = confidence interval; HR = hazard ratio; OR = odds ratio; PSA = prostate-specific antigen; UK = United Kingdom.
aMeasures of prostate cancer aggressiveness.
These studies suggest that prostate cancer in carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants may be associated with features of aggressive disease, including higher Gleason score, higher prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level at diagnosis, and higher tumor stage and/or grade at diagnosis , a finding that warrants consideration as patients undergo cancer risk assessment and genetic counseling.[3] Research is under way to gain insight into the biologic basis of aggressive prostate cancer in carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants. One study of 14 BRCA2 germline pathogenic variant carriers reported that BRCA2-associated prostate cancers harbor increased genomic instability and a mutational profile that more closely resembles metastatic prostate cancer than localized disease, with genomic and epigenomic dysregulation of the MED12L/MED12 axis similar to metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.[38]
BRCA1/BRCA2 and survival outcomes
Analyses of prostate cancer cases in families with known BRCA1 or BRCA2 pathogenic variants have been examined for survival. In an unadjusted analysis performed on a case series, median survival was 4 years in 183 men with prostate cancer with a BRCA2 pathogenic variant and 8 years in 119 men with a BRCA1 pathogenic variant. The study suggests that carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants have a poorer survival than carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants.[39] The case-control studies summarized in Table 8 further assess this observation.
Table 8. Case-Control Studies of BRCA1 and BRCA2 and Survival Outcomes
Study | Cases | Controls | Prostate Cancer–Specific Survival | Overall Survival | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tryggvadóttir et al. (2007) [31] | 30 men diagnosed with prostate cancer who were carriers of BRCA2 999del5 founder pathogenic variants | 59 men with prostate cancer matched by birth and diagnosis year and confirmed not to carry the BRCA2 999del5 pathogenic variant | BRCA2 999del5 pathogenic variant was associated with a higher risk of death from prostate cancer (HR, 3.42; 95% CI, 2.12–5.51), which remained after adjustment for tumor stage and grade (HR, 2.35; 95% CI, 1.08–5.11) | Not assessed | |
Edwards et al. (2010) [34] | 21 men diagnosed with prostate cancer who harbored a BRCA2 pathogenic variant: 6 with early-onset disease (≤55 y) from a UK prostate cancer study and 15 unselected for age at diagnosis from a UK clinical series | 1,587 age- and stage-matched men with prostate cancer | Not assessed | Overall survival was lower in carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants (4.8 y) than in noncarriers (8.5 y); in noncarriers, HR, 2.14 (95% CI, 1.28–3.56; P = .003) | |
Gallagher et al. (2010) [24] | 832 AJ men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer between 1988 and 2007, of which 6 were carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants and 20 carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants | 454 AJ men with no history of cancer | After adjusting for stage, PSA, Gleason score, and therapy received: | Not assessed | The BRCA1 5382insC founder pathogenic variant was not tested in this series. |
– Carriers of BRCA1 185delAG pathogenic variants had a greater risk of death due to prostate cancer (HR, 5.16; 95% CI, 1.09–24.53; P = .001) | |||||
— Carriers of BRCA2 6174delT pathogenic variants had a greater risk of death due to prostate cancer (HR, 5.48; 95% CI, 2.03–14.79; P = .001) | |||||
Thorne et al. (2011) [35] | 40 men diagnosed with prostate cancer who were carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants from 30 familial breast cancer families from Australia and New Zealand | 97 men from 89 familial breast cancer families from Australia and New Zealand with prostate cancer and no BRCA pathogenic variant found in the family | BRCA2 carriers were shown to have an increased risk of prostate cancer–specific mortality (HR, 4.5; 95% CI, 2.12–9.52; P = 8.9 × 10-5), compared with noncarrier controls | BRCA2 carriers were shown to have an increased risk of death (HR, 3.12; 95% CI, 1.64–6.14; P = 3.0 × 10-4), compared with noncarrier controls | There were too few BRCA1 carriers available to include in the analysis. |
Castro et al. (2013) [36] | 2,019 men diagnosed with prostate cancer from the UK, of whom 18 were carriers of BRCA1 pathogenic variants and 61 were carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants | 1,940 men who were BRCA1/BRCA2 noncarriers | Prostate cancer–specific survival at 5 y: | Overall survival at 5 y: | For localized prostate cancer, metastasis-free survival was also higher in controls than in carriers of pathogenic variants (93% vs. 77%; HR, 2.7). |
— BRCA1: 80.8% (95% CI, 56.9%–100%) | — BRCA1: 82.5% (95% CI, 60.4%–100%) | ||||
— BRCA2: 67.9% (95% CI 53.4%–82.4%) | — BRCA2: 57.9% (95% CI, 43.4%–72.4%) | ||||
— Controls: 90.6% (95% CI 88.8%–92.4%) | — Controls: 86.4% (95% CI, 84.4%–88.4%) | ||||
Castro et al. (2015) [40] | 1,302 men from the UK with local or locally advanced prostate cancer, including 67 carriers of BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants | 1,235 men who were BRCA1/BRCA2 noncarriers | Prostate cancer–specific survival: | Not assessed | |
— BRCA1/BRCA2: 61% at 10 y | |||||
— Noncarriers: 85% at 10 y |
AJ = Ashkenazi Jewish; CI = confidence interval; HR = hazard ratio; PSA = prostate-specific antigen; UK = United Kingdom.
These findings suggest overall survival (OS) and prostate cancer–specific survival may be lower in carriers of pathogenic variants than in controls.
Additional studies involving the BRCA region
A genome-wide scan for hereditary prostate cancer in 175 families from the University of Michigan Prostate Cancer Genetics Project (UM-PCGP) found evidence of linkage to chromosome 17q markers.[41] The maximum logarithm of the odds (LOD) score in all families was 2.36, and the LOD score increased to 3.27 when only families with four or more confirmed affected men were analyzed. The linkage peak was centered over the BRCA1 gene. In follow-up, these investigators screened the entire BRCA1 gene for pathogenic variants using DNA from one individual from each of 93 pedigrees with evidence of prostate cancer linkage to 17q markers.[42] Sixty-five of the individuals screened had wild-type BRCA1 sequence, and only one individual from a family with prostate and ovarian cancers was found to have a truncating pathogenic variant (3829delT). The remainder of the individuals harbored one or more germline BRCA1 variants, including 15 missense variants of uncertain clinical significance. The conclusion from these two reports is that there is evidence of a prostate cancer susceptibility gene on chromosome 17q near BRCA1; however, large deleterious inactivating variants in BRCA1 are not likely to be associated with prostate cancer risk in chromosome 17–linked families.
Another study from the UM-PCGP examined common genetic variation in BRCA1.[43] Conditional logistic regression analysis and family-based association tests were performed in 323 familial prostate cancer families and early-onset prostate cancer families, which included 817 men with and without the disease, to investigate the association of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) tagging common haplotype variation in a 200-kb region surrounding and including BRCA1. Three SNPs in BRCA1 (rs1799950, rs3737559, and rs799923) were found to be associated with prostate cancer. The strongest association was observed for SNP rs1799950 (odds ratio [OR], 2.25; 95% CI, 1.21–4.20), which leads to a glutamine-to-arginine substitution at codon 356 (Gln356Arg) of exon 11 of BRCA1. Furthermore, SNP rs1799950 was found to contribute to the linkage signal on chromosome 17q21 originally reported by the UM-PCGP.[41]
Mismatch repair (MMR) genes
Five genes are implicated in MMR, namely MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, and EPCAM. Germline pathogenic variants in these five genes have been associated with Lynch syndrome, which manifests by cases of nonpolyposis colorectal cancer and a constellation of other cancers in families, including endometrial, ovarian, and duodenal cancers; and transitional cell cancers of the ureter and renal pelvis. Reports have suggested that prostate cancer may be observed in men harboring an MMR gene pathogenic variant.[44,45] The first quantitative study described nine cases of prostate cancer occurring in a population-based cohort of 106 Norwegian male carriers of MMR gene pathogenic variants or obligate carriers.[46] The expected number of cases among these 106 men was 1.52 (P < .01); the men were younger at the time of diagnosis (60.4 y vs. 66.6 y; P = .006) and had more evidence of Gleason score of 8 to 10 (P < .00001) than the cases from the Norwegian Cancer Registry. Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed that the cumulative risk of prostate cancer diagnosis by age 70 years was 30% in carriers of MMR gene pathogenic variants and 8% in the general population. This finding awaits confirmation in additional populations. A population-based case-control study examined haplotype-tagging SNPs in three MMR genes (MLH1, MSH2, and PMS2). This study provided some evidence supporting the contribution of genetic variation in MLH1 and overall risk of prostate cancer.[47] To assess the contribution of prostate cancer as a feature of Lynch syndrome, one study performed microsatellite instability (MSI) testing on prostate cancer tissue blocks from families enrolled in a prostate cancer family registry who also reported a history of colon cancer. Among 35 tissue blocks from 31 distinct families, two tumors from families with MMR gene pathogenic variants were found to be MSI-high. The authors conclude that MSI is rare in hereditary prostate cancer.[48] Other studies are attempting to characterize rates of prostate cancer in Lynch syndrome families and correlate molecular features with prostate cancer risk.[49]
One study that included two familial cancer registries found an increased cumulative incidence and risk of prostate cancer among 198 independent families with MMR gene pathogenic variants and Lynch syndrome.[50] The cumulative lifetime risk of prostate cancer (to age 80 y) was 30.0% (95% CI, 16.54%–41.30%; P = .07) in carriers of MMR gene pathogenic variants, whereas it was 17.84% in the general population, according to the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program estimates. There was a trend of increased prostate cancer risk in carriers of pathogenic variants by age 50 years, where the risk was 0.64% (95% CI, 0.24%–1.01%; P = .06), compared with a risk of 0.26% in the general population. Overall, the hazard ratio (HR) (to age 80 y) for prostate cancer in carriers of MMR gene pathogenic variants in the combined data set was 1.99 (95% CI, 1.31–3.03; P = .0013). Among men aged 20 to 59 years, the HR was 2.48 (95% CI, 1.34–4.59; P = .0038).
A systematic review and meta-analysis that included 23 studies (6 studies with molecular characterization and 18 risk studies, of which 12 studies quantified risk for prostate cancer) reported an association of prostate cancer with Lynch syndrome.[51] In the six molecular studies included in the analysis, 73% (95% CI, 57%–85%) of prostate cancers in carriers of MMR gene pathogenic variants were MMR deficient. The RR of prostate cancer in carriers of MMR gene pathogenic variants was estimated to be 3.67 (95% CI, 2.32–6.67). Of the twelve risk studies, the RR of prostate cancer ranged from 2.11 to 2.28, compared with that seen in the general population depending on carrier status, prior diagnosis of colorectal cancer, or unknown male carrier status from families with a known pathogenic variant.
A study from three sites participating in the Colon Cancer Family Registry examined 32 cases of prostate cancer (mean age at diagnosis, 62 y; standard deviation, 8 y) in men with a documented MMR gene pathogenic variant (23 MSH2 carriers, 5 MLH1 carriers, and 4 MSH6 carriers).[52] Seventy-two percent (n = 23) had a previous diagnosis of colorectal cancer. Immunohistochemistry was used to assess MMR protein loss, which was observed in 22 tumors (69%); the pattern of loss of protein expression was 100% concordant with the germline pathogenic variant. The RR of prostate cancer was highest in carriers of MSH2 pathogenic variants (RR, 5.8; 95% CI, 2.6–20.9); the RRs in carriers of MLH1 and MSH6 pathogenic variants were 1.7 (95% CI, 1.1–6.7) and 1.3 (95% CI, 1.1–5.3), respectively. Gleason scores ranged from 5 to 10; two tumors had a Gleason score of 5; 22 tumors had a Gleason score of 6 or 7; and eight tumors had a Gleason score higher than 8. Sixty-seven percent (12 of 18) of the tumors were found to have perineural invasion, and 47% (9 of 19) had extracapsular invasion.
Although the risk of prostate cancer appears to be elevated in families with Lynch syndrome, strategies for germline testing for MMR gene pathogenic variants in index prostate cancer patients remain to be determined.
HOXB13
Linkage to 17q21-22 was initially reported by the UM-PCGP from 175 pedigrees of families with hereditary prostate cancer.[41] Fine-mapping of this region provided strong evidence of linkage (LOD score, 5.49) and a narrow candidate interval (15.5 Mb) for a putative susceptibility gene among 147 families with four or more affected men and average age at diagnosis of 65 years or younger.[53] The exons of 200 genes in the 17q21-22 region were sequenced in DNA from 94 unrelated patients from hereditary prostate cancer families (from the UM-PCGP and Johns Hopkins).[54] Probands from four families were discovered to have a recurrent pathogenic variant (G84E) in HOXB13, and 18 men with prostate cancer from these four families carried the pathogenic variant. The pathogenic variant status was determined in 5,083 additional cases and 2,662 controls. Carrier frequencies and ORs for prostate cancer risk were as follows:
- Men with a positive family history of prostate cancer: 2.2% versus negative: 0.8% (OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.6–5.1; P = 1.2 × 10-4).
- Men younger than 55 years at diagnosis: 2.2% versus older than 55 years: 0.8% (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.6–4.7; P = 1.1 × 10-4).
- Men with a positive family history of prostate cancer and younger than 55 years at diagnosis: 3.1% versus a negative family history of prostate cancer and age at diagnosis older than 55 years: 0.6% (OR, 5.1; 95% CI, 2.4–12.2; P = 2.0 × 10-6).
- Men with a positive family history of prostate cancer and older than 55 years at diagnosis: 1.2%.
- Controls: 0.1% to 0.2%.[54]
A validation study from the International Consortium of Prostate Cancer Genetics confirmed HOXB13 as a susceptibility gene for prostate cancer risk.[55] Within carrier families, the G84E pathogenic variant was more common among men with prostate cancer than among unaffected men (OR, 4.42; 95% CI, 2.56–7.64). The G84E pathogenic variant was also significantly overtransmitted from parents to affected offspring (P = 6.5 × 10-6).
Additional studies have emerged that better define the carrier frequency, prostate cancer risk, and penetrance associated with the HOXB13 G84E pathogenic variant.[54,56-61] This pathogenic variant appears to be restricted to white men, primarily of European descent.[54,56-58] The highest carrier frequency of 6.25% was reported in Finnish early-onset cases.[59] A pooled analysis that included 9,016 cases and 9,678 controls of European Americans found an overall G84E pathogenic variant frequency of 1.34% among cases and 0.28% among controls.[60]
Risk of prostate cancer by HOXB13 G84E pathogenic variant status has been reported to vary by age of onset, family history, and geographical region. A validation study in an independent cohort of 9,988 cases and 61,994 controls from six studies of men of European ancestry, including 4,537 cases and 54,444 controls from Iceland whose genotypes were largely imputed, reported an OR of 7.06 (95% CI, 4.62–10.78; P = 1.5 × 10−19) for prostate cancer risk by G84E carrier status.[62] A pooled analysis reported a prostate cancer OR of 4.86 (95% CI, 3.18–7.69; P = 3.48 × 10-17) in men with HOXB13 pathogenic variants compared with noncarriers; this increased to an OR of 8.41 (95% CI, 5.27–13.76; P = 2.72 ×10-22) among men diagnosed with prostate cancer at age 55 years or younger. The OR was 7.19 (95% CI, 4.55–11.67; P = 9.3 × 10-21) among men with a positive family history of prostate cancer and 3.09 (95% CI, 1.83–5.23; P = 6.26 × 10-6) among men with a negative family history of prostate cancer.[60] A meta-analysis that included 24,213 cases and 73,631 controls of European descent revealed an overall OR for prostate cancer by carrier status of 4.07 (95% CI, 3.05–5.45; P < .00001). Risk of prostate cancer varied by geographical region: United States (OR, 5.10; 95% CI, 3.21–8.10; P < .00001), Canada (OR, 5.80; 95% CI, 1.27–26.51; P = .02), Northern Europe (OR, 3.61; 95% CI, 2.81–4.64; P < .00001), and Western Europe (OR, 8.47; 95% CI, 3.68–19.48; P < .00001).[57] In addition, the association between the G84E pathogenic variant and prostate cancer risk was higher for early-onset cases (OR, 10.11; 95% CI, 5.97–17.12). There was no significant association with aggressive disease in the meta-analysis.
Another meta-analysis that included 11 case-control studies also reported higher risk estimates for prostate cancer in HOXB13 G84E carriers (OR, 4.51; 95% CI, 3.28–6.20; P < .00001) and found a stronger association between HOXB13 G84E and early-onset disease (OR, 9.73; 95% CI, 6.57–14.39; P < .00001).[63] An additional meta-analysis of 25 studies including 51,390 cases and 93,867 controls revealed an OR for prostate cancer of 3.248 (95% CI, 2.121–3.888). The association was most significant in whites (OR, 2.673; 95% CI, 1.920–3.720), especially those of European descent. No association was found for breast or colorectal cancer.[64] One population-based, case-control study from the United States confirmed the association of the G84E pathogenic variant with prostate cancer (OR, 3.30; 95% CI, 1.21–8.96) and reported a suggestive association with aggressive disease.[65] In addition, one study identified no men of AJ ancestry who carried the G84E pathogenic variant.[66] A case-control study from the United Kingdom that included 8,652 cases and 5,252 controls also confirmed the association of HOXB13 G84E with prostate cancer (OR, 2.93; 95% CI, 1.94–4.59; P = 6.27 × 10-8).[67] The risk was higher among men with a family history of the disease (OR, 4.53; 95% CI, 2.86–7.34; P = 3.1 × 10−8) and in early-onset prostate cancer (diagnosed at age 55 y or younger) (OR, 3.11; 95% CI, 1.98–5.00; P = 6.1 × 10−7). No association was found between carrier status and Gleason score, cancer stage, OS, or cancer-specific survival.
Penetrance estimates for prostate cancer development in carriers of the HOXB13 G84E pathogenic variant are also being reported. One study from Sweden estimated a 33% lifetime risk of prostate cancer among G84E carriers.[68] Another study from Australia reported an age-specific cumulative risk of prostate cancer of up to 60% by age 80 years.[69]
HOXB13 plays a role in prostate cancer development and interacts with the androgen receptor; however, the mechanism by which it contributes to the pathogenesis of prostate cancer remains unknown. This is the first gene identified to account for a fraction of hereditary prostate cancer, particularly early-onset prostate cancer. The clinical utility and implications for genetic counseling regarding the HOXB13 G84E pathogenic variant have yet to be defined.
ATM
Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by neurologic deterioration, telangiectasias, immunodeficiency states, and hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation. It is estimated that 1% of the general population may be heterozygote carriers of ATM variants.[70] In the presence of DNA damage, the ATM protein is involved in mediating cell cycle arrest, DNA repair, and apoptosis.[71] Given evidence of other cancer risks in heterozygote carriers, evidence of an association with prostate cancer susceptibility continues to emerge. (Refer to the ATM section in the PDQ summary on Genetics of Breast and Gynecologic Cancers for more information about ATM and breast cancer.) A prospective case series of 10,317 Danish individuals with 36 years of follow-up, during which 2,056 individuals developed cancer, found that Ser49Cys was associated with prostate cancer (HR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.1–5.0).[71] A retrospective case series of 692 men with metastatic prostate cancer unselected for cancer family history or age at diagnosis found that 1.6% (11 of 692) had an ATM pathogenic variant.[7]
CHEK2
CHEK2 has also been investigated for a potential association with prostate cancer risk. A retrospective case series of 692 men with metastatic prostate cancer unselected for cancer family history or age at diagnosis found 1.9% (10 of 534 [men with data]) were found to have a CHEK2 pathogenic variant.[7]
TP53
TP53 has also been investigated for a potential association with prostate cancer risk. In a case series of 286 individuals from 107 families with a deleterious TP53 variant, 403 cancer diagnoses were reported, of which 211 were the first primary cancer including two prostate cancers diagnosed after age 45 years. Prostate cancer was also reported in 4 of 61 men with a second primary cancer.[72] In a Dutch case series of 180 families meeting either classic Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) or Li-Fraumeni–like (LFL) family history criteria, a deleterious TP53 variant was identified in 24 families with one case of prostate cancer found in each group (LFS or LFL). Prostate cancer risks varied on the basis of the family history criteria with LFS (RR, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.01–3.00) and LFL (RR, 4.90; 95% CI, 0.10–27.00).[73] In a French case series of 415 families with a deleterious TP53 variant, four prostate cancers were reported, with a mean age at diagnosis of 63 years (range, 57–71 y).[74]
Germline TP53 pathogenic variants have also been identified in men with prostate cancer who have undergone tumor testing. A prospective case series of 42 men with either localized, biochemically recurrent, or metastatic prostate cancer unselected for cancer family history or age at diagnosis undergoing tumor-only somatic testing found that 2 of 42 men (5%) were found to have a suspected TP53 germline pathogenic variant.[75]
Further evidence supports an association between prostate cancer and germline TP53 pathogenic variants,[76-78] although additional studies to clarify the association with this gene are warranted.
NBN/NBS1
NBN, which is also known as NBS1 (Nijmegan breakage syndrome 1), has been investigated for a potential association with risk of prostate cancer. A retrospective case series of 692 men with metastatic prostate cancer unselected for cancer family history or age at diagnosis found that 0.3% (2 of 692 men) had a NBN pathogenic variant.[7]
EPCAM
EPCAM (epithelial cellular adhesion molecule) testing has been included in some multigene panels likely due to EPCAM variants silencing MSH2. Specific large genomic rearrangement variants at the 3’ end of EPCAM, which lies near MSH2, induce methylation of the MSH2 promoter resulting in MSH2 protein loss.[79] (Refer to the EPCAM section in the PDQ summary on Genetics of Colorectal Cancer for a more detailed discussion about EPCAM and Lynch syndrome.) Pathogenic variants in MSH2 that are associated with Lynch syndrome were found to be associated with increased risk of prostate cancer.[52] (Refer to the Mismatch Repair genes section of this summary for information about MSH2 and prostate cancer risk.) Thus far, studies ascertaining the spectrum of germline pathogenic variants in men with prostate cancer have not identified pathogenic variants in EPCAM.[7]
Germline Pathogenic Variants in Men With Metastatic Prostate Cancer
The metastatic prostate cancer setting is also contributing insights into the germline pathogenic variant spectrum of prostate cancer. Clinical sequencing of 150 metastatic tumors from men with castrate-resistant prostate cancer identified alterations in genes involved in DNA repair in 23% of men.[80] Interestingly, 8% of these variants were pathogenic and present in the germline. Another study focused on tumor-normal sequencing of advanced and metastatic cancers identified germline pathogenic variants in 19.6% of men (71 of 362) with prostate cancer.[81] Germline pathogenic variants were found in BRCA1, BRCA2, MSH2, MSH6, PALB2, PMS2, ATM, BRIP1, NBN, as well as other genes. These and other studies are summarized in Table 9. The contribution of germline variants identified from large sequencing efforts to inherited prostate cancer predisposition requires molecular confirmation of genes not classically linked to prostate cancer risk.
Table 9. Summary of Tumor Sequencing Studies With Germline Findings
Study | Cohort | Germline Results for Prostate Cancer | Comments | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robinson et al. (2015)a [80] | Whole-exome and transcriptome sequencing of bone or soft tissue tumor biopsies from a cohort of 150 men with mCRPC | 8% had germline pathogenic variants: | |||
— BRCA2: 9/150 (6.0%) | |||||
— ATM: 2/150 (1.3%) | |||||
— BRCA1: 1/150 (0.7%) | |||||
Pritchard et al. (2016)a [7] | 692 men with metastatic prostate cancer, unselected for family history; analysis focused on 20 genes involved in maintaining DNA integrity and associated with autosomal dominant cancer–predisposing syndromes | 82/692 (11.8%) had germline pathogenic variants: | Frequency of germline pathogenic variants in DNA repair genes among men with metastatic prostate cancer significantly exceeded the prevalence of 4.6% among 499 men with localized prostate cancer in the Cancer Genome Atlas (P < .001). | ||
— BRCA2: 37/692 (5.3%) | |||||
— ATM: 11/692 (1.6%) | |||||
— BRCA1: 6/692 (0.9%) | |||||
Schrader et al. (2016) [82] | 1,566 patients undergoing tumor profiling (341 genes) with matched normal DNA at a single institution; 97 cases of prostate cancer included | 10/97 (10.3%) had germline pathogenic variants: | |||
— BRCA2: 6/97 (6.2%) | |||||
— BRCA1: 1/97 (1.0%) | |||||
— MSH6: 1/97 (1.0%) | |||||
— MUTYH: 1/97 (1.0%) | |||||
— PMS2: 1/97 (1.0%) |
mCRPC = metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.
aPotential overlap of cohorts.
Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer Precision Oncology
Targeted therapies on the basis of genetic results are increasingly driving options for treatment in oncology. With greater recognition of germline pathogenic variants in men with advanced or metastatic prostate cancer, treatment options have also expanded. Men with DNA repair pathogenic variants have been reported to have increased clinical activity to poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors.[83] On the basis of increasing data, olaparib was given Breakthrough Therapy Designation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for BRCA1/BRCA2 or ATM mutated metastatic prostate cancer. Furthermore, pembrolizumab has received FDA approval for MSI-high and MMR-deficient cancers, which may also have an impact on treatment options for men with metastatic prostate cancer. Multiple studies have reported outcomes regarding prostate cancer treatment on the basis of germline variant status primarily among men with metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer, although emerging studies are focusing on the early-treatment setting. Multiple genetically informed clinical trials are under way for men with prostate cancer.[84] Table 10 summarizes some of the published precision oncology and precision management studies.
Table 10. Summary of Precision Oncology or Precision Management Studies Involving Germline Pathogenic Variant Status
Study | Cohort | Germline Results | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Annala et al. (2017) [85] | 319 men with mCRPC; performed germline sequencing of 22 DNA repair genes | 24/319 (7.5%) had DDR germline pathogenic variants: | Patients with DNA repair defects had decreased responses to ADT: |
— BRCA2: 16/319 (5.0%) | — Time from ADT initiation to mCRPC (mo): Germline positive, 11.8 (n = 22) vs. germline negative, 19.0 (n = 113) (P = .031). | ||
— ATM: 1/319 (0.3%) | — PFS on first-line AR-targeted therapy (mo): Germline positive, 3.3 vs. germline negative, 6.2 (P = .01). | ||
— BRCA1: 1/319 (0.3%) | |||
— PALB2: 2/319 (0.6%) | |||
Antonarakis et al. (2018) [86] | 172 men with mCRPC beginning treatment with abiraterone or enzalutamide | 22/172 (12.8%) had DDR germline pathogenic variants: | In propensity score–weighted multivariable analyses, outcomes were superior in men with germline BRCA1/BRCA2/ATM variants with respect to PSA-PFS (HR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.25–0.92; P = .027), PFS (HR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.28–0.98; P = .044), and OS (HR, 0.34; 95% CI, 0.12–0.99; P = .048). These results were not observed for men with non-BRCA1/BRCA2/ATM germline variants (all P > .10). Study limited by the small number of patients (n = 9) with BRCA1/BRCA2/ATM variants. |
— BRCA1/BRCA2/ATM: 9/172 (5.2%) | |||
Mateo et al. (2018) [87] | 390 men with mPC; retrospective chart review | 60/390 (15.4%) had germline DDR pathogenic variants: | Similar findings were observed for DDR pathogenic variant carriers and noncarriers for several outcome measures: |
— Median OS from castration resistance (3.2 y in carriers vs 3.0 y in noncarriers; P = .73). | |||
— Median docetaxel PFS (6.8 mo in carriers vs. 5.1 mo in noncarriers). | |||
— BRCA2: 37/390 (9.5%) | — RRs for prostate cancer (61% in carriers vs. 54% in noncarriers). | ||
— Median PFS on first-line abiraterone/enzalutamide (8.3 mo in both carriers and noncarriers). | |||
— RR of prostate cancer on first-line abiraterone/enzalutamide (46% in carriers vs. 56% in noncarriers). | |||
Castro et al. (2019) [88] | 419 men with mCRPC | 68/419 (16.2%) had germline DDR pathogenic variants: | CSS between ATM/BRCA1/BRCA2/PALB2 carriers and noncarriers was not statistically significant (23.3 mo vs. 33.2 mo; P = .264). CSS was halved in BRCA2 carriers (17.4 mo vs. 33.2 mo; P = .027), and BRCA2 variants were identified as an independent prognostic factor for CSS (HR, 2.11; P = .033). Significant interactions between BRCA2 status and treatment type (androgen signaling inhibitor vs. taxane therapy) were observed (CSS adjusted P = .014; PFS adjusted P = .005). CSS (24.0 mo vs. 17.0 mo) and PFS (18.9 mo vs. 8.6 mo) were greater in BRCA2 carriers treated in first line with abiraterone or enzalutamide compared with taxanes. |
— BRCA2: 14/419 (3.3%) | |||
— ATM: 8/419 (1.9%) | |||
— BRCA1: 4/419 (1%) | |||
— PALB2: None |
ADT = androgen deprivation therapy; AR = androgen receptor; CSS = cause-specific survival; DDR = DNA damage repair; HR = hazard ratio; mCRPC = metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; mPC = metastatic prostate cancer; OS = overall survival; PFS = progression-free survival; PSA = prostate-specific antigen; RR = relative risk.
For a summary of available clinical practice guidelines for genetic testing in prostate cancer, refer to Table 2.
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Screening and Prevention Interventions in Familial Prostate Cancer
Background
Decisions about risk-reducing interventions for patients with an inherited predisposition to prostate cancer, as with any disease, are best guided by randomized controlled clinical trials and knowledge of the underlying natural history of the process. However, existing studies of screening for prostate cancer in high-risk men (men with a positive family history of prostate cancer and African American men) are predominantly based on retrospective case series or retrospective cohort analyses. Because awareness of a positive family history can lead to more frequent work-ups for cancer and result in apparently earlier prostate cancer detection, assessments of disease progression rates and survival after diagnosis are subject to selection, lead time, and length biases. (Refer to the PDQ Cancer Screening Overview summary for more information.) This section focuses on screening and risk reduction of prostate cancer among men predisposed to the disease; data relevant to screening in high-risk men are primarily extracted from studies performed in the general population.
Screening
Information is limited about the efficacy of commonly available screening tests such as the digital rectal exam (DRE) and serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in men genetically predisposed to developing prostate cancer. Furthermore, comparing the results of studies that have examined the efficacy of screening for prostate cancer is difficult because studies vary with regard to the cutoff values chosen for an elevated PSA test. For a given sensitivity and specificity of a screening test, the positive predictive value (PPV) increases as the underlying prevalence of disease rises. Therefore, it is theoretically possible that the PPV and diagnostic yield will be higher for the DRE and for PSA in men with a genetic predisposition than in average-risk populations.[1,2]
Most retrospective analyses of prostate cancer screening cohorts have reported PPV for PSA, with or without DRE, among high-risk men in the range of 23% to 75%.[2-6] Screening strategies (frequency of PSA measurements or inclusion of DRE) and PSA cutoff for biopsy varied among these studies, which may have influenced this range of PPV. Cancer detection rates among high-risk men have been reported to be in the range of 4.75% to 22%.[2,5,6] Most cancers detected were of intermediate Gleason score (5–7), with Gleason scores of 8 or higher being detected in some high-risk men. Overall, there is limited information about the net benefits and harms of screening men at higher risk of prostate cancer. In addition, there is little evidence to support specific screening approaches in prostate cancer families at high risk. Risks and benefits of routine screening in the general population are discussed in the PDQ Prostate Cancer Screening summary. On the basis of the available data, most professional societies and organizations recommend that high-risk men engage in shared decision-making with their health care providers and develop individualized plans for prostate cancer screening based on their risk factors. A summary of prostate cancer screening recommendations for high-risk men by professional organizations is shown in Table 11.
Table 11. Summary of Prostate Cancer Screening Recommendations for High-Risk Men
Screening Recommendation Source | Population | Test | Age Screening Initiated | Frequency | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States Preventive Services Task Force (2012) [7] | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | No specific recommendation for high-risk populations (defined as black men and men with a prostate cancer family history). |
American College of Physicians (2013) [8] | African American men and men with first-degree relative diagnosed with prostate cancer, especially <65 y | PSA | ≥45 y | No clear evidence to establish screening frequency | Counseling includes information about the uncertainties, risks, and potential benefits associated with prostate cancer screening. |
No clear evidence to perform PSA test more frequently than every 4 y | |||||
Men with family history of multiple family members with prostate cancer diagnosed <65 y | PSA | ≥40 y | |||
PSA level >2.5 µg/L may warrant annual screening | |||||
American Urological Association (2013) [9] | African American men and men with a strong prostate cancer family history | PSA | >40 to <55 y | Individualized based on personal preferences and informed discussion regarding the uncertainty of benefit and associated harms. | |
American Cancer Society (2014) [10] | African American men and/or men with a father or brother with prostate cancer diagnosed <65 y | PSA with or without DREa | ≥45 y | Frequency depends on PSA level | Counseling consists of a review of the benefits and limitations of testing so that a clinician-assisted, informed decision about testing can be made. |
Men with multiple family members with prostate cancer diagnosed <65 y | PSA with or without DREa | ≥40 y | Frequency depends on PSA level | ||
NCCN (2019) [11] | African American men and men with family history of prostate cancer | N/A | N/A | N/A | The panel states that it is reasonable for African American men to consider beginning shared decision-making about PSA screening with their providers at age 40 y and to consider screening at annual intervals rather than every other year. |
NCCN (2019) [12] | Men with BRCA1 pathogenic variant | Not specified | Consider screening starting at age ≥45 y | Not specified | |
Men with BRCA2 pathogenic variant | Not specified | ≥45 y | Not specified | ||
NCCN (2019) [11] | Men with a personal or family history of high-risk germline pathogenic variants | Baseline PSA; strongly consider baseline DRE | 45–75 y | Every 2–4 y if PSA level <1 ng/mL, DRE normal | Additional recommendations for men with a PSA level >3 ng/mL or very suspicious DRE and men older than 75 y. (Refer to page PROSD-2 of the NCCN guidelines for more information.) Referral to a cancer genetics professional is recommended for those with a known or suspected cancer susceptibility gene.[11] |
Every 1–2 y if PSA level 1–3 ng/mL, DRE normal |
DRE = digital rectal exam; NCCN = National Comprehensive Cancer Network; PSA = prostate-specific antigen.
aDRE is recommended in addition to PSA test for men with hypogonadism.
Screening in carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants
An international study that focused on prostate cancer screening in carriers of BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants versus noncarriers reported initial screening results.[13] The study recruited 2,481 men (791 BRCA1 carriers, 531 BRCA1 noncarriers; 731 BRCA2 carriers, 428 BRCA2 noncarriers). A total of 199 men (8%) presented with PSA levels higher than 3.0 ng/mL, which was the study PSA cutoff for recommending a biopsy. The overall cancer detection rate was 36.4% (59 prostate cancers diagnosed among 162 biopsies). Prostate cancer by BRCA pathogenic variant status was as follows: BRCA1 carriers (n = 18), BRCA1 noncarriers (n = 10); BRCA2 carriers (n = 24), BRCA2 noncarriers (n = 7). Using published stage and grade criteria for risk classification,[14] intermediate- or high-risk tumors were diagnosed in 11 of 18 BRCA1 carriers (61%), 8 of 10 BRCA1 noncarriers (80%), 17 of 24 BRCA2 carriers (71%), and 3 of 7 BRCA2 noncarriers (43%). The PPV of PSA with a biopsy threshold of 3.0 ng/mL was 48% in carriers of BRCA2 pathogenic variants, 33.3% in BRCA2 noncarriers, 37.5% in BRCA1 carriers, and 23.3% in BRCA1 noncarriers. Ninety-five percent of the men were white; therefore, the results cannot be generalized to all ethnic groups. Follow-up for this study is ongoing.
Level of evidence (screening in carriers of BRCA pathogenic variants): 3
Chemoprevention of Prostate Cancer With Finasteride and Dutasteride
The benefits, harms, and supporting data regarding the use of finasteride and dutasteride for the prevention of prostate cancer in the general population are discussed in the PDQ summary on Prostate Cancer Prevention.
References
- Sartor O: Early detection of prostate cancer in African-American men with an increased familial risk of disease. J La State Med Soc 148 (4): 179-85, 1996. [PubMed: 8935621]
- Matikainen MP, Schleutker J, Mörsky P, et al.: Detection of subclinical cancers by prostate-specific antigen screening in asymptomatic men from high-risk prostate cancer families. Clin Cancer Res 5 (6): 1275-9, 1999. [PubMed: 10389909]
- Catalona WJ, Antenor JA, Roehl KA, et al.: Screening for prostate cancer in high risk populations. J Urol 168 (5): 1980-3; discussion 1983-4, 2002. [PubMed: 12394689]
- Valeri A, Cormier L, Moineau MP, et al.: Targeted screening for prostate cancer in high risk families: early onset is a significant risk factor for disease in first degree relatives. J Urol 168 (2): 483-7, 2002. [PubMed: 12131293]
- Narod SA, Dupont A, Cusan L, et al.: The impact of family history on early detection of prostate cancer. Nat Med 1 (2): 99-101, 1995. [PubMed: 7585019]
- Giri VN, Beebe-Dimmer J, Buyyounouski M, et al.: Prostate cancer risk assessment program: a 10-year update of cancer detection. J Urol 178 (5): 1920-4; discussion 1924, 2007. [PubMed: 17868726]
- Moyer VA; U.S. Preventive Services Task Force: Screening for prostate cancer: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med 157 (2): 120-34, 2012. [PubMed: 22801674]
- Qaseem A, Barry MJ, Denberg TD, et al.: Screening for prostate cancer: a guidance statement from the Clinical Guidelines Committee of the American College of Physicians. Ann Intern Med 158 (10): 761-9, 2013. [PubMed: 23567643]
- Carter HB, Albertsen PC, Barry MJ, et al.: Early detection of prostate cancer: AUA Guideline. J Urol 190 (2): 419-26, 2013. [PMC free article: PMC4020420] [PubMed: 23659877]
- Smith RA, Manassaram-Baptiste D, Brooks D, et al.: Cancer screening in the United States, 2014: a review of current American Cancer Society guidelines and current issues in cancer screening. CA Cancer J Clin 64 (1): 30-51, 2014 Jan-Feb. [PubMed: 24408568]
- National Comprehensive Cancer Network: NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Prostate Cancer Early Detection. Version 2.2019. Plymouth Meeting, Pa: National Comprehensive Cancer Network, 2019. Available online with free registration. Last accessed June 03, 2019.
- National Comprehensive Cancer Network: NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian. Version 3.2019. Plymouth Meeting, Pa: National Comprehensive Cancer Network, 2019. Available online with free registration. Last accessed June 20, 2019.
- Bancroft EK, Page EC, Castro E, et al.: Targeted prostate cancer screening in BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers: results from the initial screening round of the IMPACT study. Eur Urol 66 (3): 489-99, 2014. [PMC free article: PMC4105321] [PubMed: 24484606]
- National Collaborating Centre for Cancer (UK): Prostate Cancer: Diagnosis and Treatment. Cardiff, UK: National Collaborating Centre for Cancer, 2008. Available online. Last accessed June 7, 2019.
Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment
The purpose of this section is to describe current approaches to assessing and counseling patients about susceptibility to prostate cancer. Genetic counseling for men at increased risk of prostate cancer encompasses all of the elements of genetic counseling for other hereditary cancers. (Refer to the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information.) The components of genetic counseling include concepts of prostate cancer risk, reinforcing the importance of detailed family history, pedigree analysis to derive age-related risk, and offering participation in research studies to those individuals who have multiple affected family members.[1,2] Genetic testing for prostate cancer susceptibility is not available outside of the context of a research study. Families with prostate cancer can be referred to ongoing research studies; however, these studies will not provide individual genetic results to participants.
Prostate cancer will affect an estimated one in nine American men during their lifetime.[3] Currently, evidence exists to support the hypothesis that approximately 5% to 10% of all prostate cancer is due to rare autosomal dominant prostate cancer susceptibility genes.[4,5] The proportion of prostate cancer associated with an inherited susceptibility may be even larger.[6-8] Men are generally considered to be candidates for genetic counseling regarding prostate cancer risk if they have a family history of prostate cancer. The Hopkins Criteria provide a working definition of hereditary prostate cancer families.[9] The three criteria include the following:
- Three or more first-degree relatives (father, brother, son), or
- Three successive generations of either the maternal or paternal lineages, or
- At least two relatives affected at or before age 55 years.
Families need to fulfill only one of these criteria to be considered to have hereditary prostate cancer. One study investigated attitudes regarding prostate cancer susceptibility among sons of men with prostate cancer.[10] They found that 90% of sons were interested in knowing whether there is an inherited susceptibility to prostate cancer and would be likely to undergo screening and consider genetic testing if there was a family history of prostate cancer; however, similar high levels of interest in genetic testing for other hereditary cancer syndromes have not generally been borne out in testing uptake once the clinical genetic test becomes available.
Risk Assessment and Analysis
Assessment of a man concerned about his inherited risk of prostate cancer should include taking a detailed family history; eliciting information regarding personal prostate cancer risk factors such as age, race, and dietary intake of fats and dairy products; documenting other medical problems; and evaluating genetics-related psychosocial issues.
Family history documentation is based on construction of a pedigree, and generally includes the following:
- The history of cancer in both maternal and paternal bloodlines.
- All primary cancer diagnoses (not just prostate cancer) and ages at diagnosis.
- Race and ethnicity.
- Other health problems including benign prostatic hypertrophy.[11]
(Refer to the Documenting the family history section in the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for a more detailed description of taking a family history.)
Analysis of the family history generally consists of four components:
- Evaluation of the pattern of cancers in the family to identify cancer clusters, which might suggest a known inherited cancer syndrome. In addition to site-specific prostate cancer, other cancer susceptibility syndromes include prostate cancer as a component tumor (e.g., hereditary breast/ovarian cancer syndrome [associated with pathogenic variants in BRCA1 and BRCA2]).
- Assessment for genetic transmission. The pedigree should be assessed for evidence of both autosomal dominant and X-linked inheritance, which may be associated with a higher likelihood of an inherited susceptibility to prostate cancer. Autosomal dominant transmission is characterized by the presence of affected family members in sequential generations, with approximately 50% of males in each generation affected with prostate cancer. X-linked inheritance is suggested by apparent transmission of susceptibility from affected males in the maternal lineage. (Refer to the Analysis of the Family History section in the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information.)
- Age at diagnosis of prostate cancer in the family. An inherited susceptibility to prostate cancer may be likely in families with early-onset (inconsistently defined) prostate cancer.[12] However, genetic research is also under way in families with an older age of prostate cancer onset. In the aggregate, the data are inconsistent relative to whether hereditary prostate cancer is routinely characterized by a younger-than-usual age at diagnosis.
- Risk assessment based on family and epidemiological studies. Multiple studies have reported that first-degree relatives of men affected with prostate cancer are two to three times more likely to develop prostate cancer than are men in the general population. In some studies, the relative risk (RR) of prostate cancer is highest among families who develop prostate cancer at an earlier age, consistent with other cancer susceptibility syndromes in which early age at onset is a common feature. It has been estimated that male relatives of men diagnosed with prostate cancer younger than 53 years have a 40% lifetime cumulative risk of developing prostate cancer.[13] A population-based case-control study of more than 1,500 cases and 1,600 controls, in which whites, African Americans, and Asian Americans were studied, reported an odds ratio of 2.5 for men with an affected first-degree relative after adjusting for age and ethnicity.[14] For men with a brother and father or son affected with prostate cancer, the RR was estimated to be 6.4.
A number of studies have examined the accuracy of the family history of prostate cancer provided by men with prostate cancer. This has clinical importance when risk assessments are based on unverified family history information. In an Australian study of 154 unaffected men with a family history of prostate cancer, self-reported family history was verified from cancer registry data in 89.6% of cases.[15] Accuracy of age at diagnosis within a 3-year range was correct in 83% of the cases, and accuracy of age at diagnosis within a 5-year range was correct in 93% of the cases. Self-reported family history from men younger than 55 years and reports about first-degree relatives had the highest degree of accuracy.[15] Self-reported family history of prostate cancer, however, may not be reliably reported over time,[16] which underscores the need to verify objectively reported prostate cancer diagnoses when trying to determine whether a patient has a significant family history.
The personal health and risk-factor history includes, but is not limited to, the following:
- Family history.
- Age.
- Race.
- Current and past diet history, including fat intake.
- Current and past use of drugs that can affect prostatic growth, such as steroids (e.g., finasteride [Proscar]). (Refer to the PDQ summary on Prostate Cancer Prevention for more information about finasteride and prostate cancer.)
The most definitive risk factors for prostate cancer are age, race, and family history.[18] The correlation between other risk factors and prostate cancer risk is not clearly established. Despite this limitation, cancer risk counseling is an educational process that provides details regarding the state of the knowledge of prostate cancer risk factors. The discussion regarding these other risk factors should be individualized to incorporate the patient's personal health and risk factor history. (Refer to the Risk Factors for Prostate Cancer section of this summary for a more detailed description of prostate cancer risk factors.)
The psychosocial assessment in this context might include evaluation of the following:
- Level of psychological distress.
- Perceived risk of prostate cancer.
- Past history of depression, anxiety, or other mental illness.
One study found that psychological distress was greater among men attending prostate cancer screening who had a family history of the disease, particularly if they also reported an overestimation of prostate cancer risk. Psychological distress and elevated risk perception may influence adherence to cancer screening and risk management strategies. Consultation with a mental health professional may be valuable if serious psychosocial issues are identified.[19]
Genetic Testing
Multigene (panel) tests for variants in genes associated with prostate cancer susceptibility are currently available and are increasingly being used in the clinic. (Refer to the Multigene [Panel] Testing in Prostate Cancer section for more information.) Although routine genetic testing of high-risk prostate cancer patients for inherited variants associated with the disease is not standard, many centers are studying the clinical utility of germline genetic testing and counseling in these patients.
References
- Nieder AM, Taneja SS, Zeegers MP, et al.: Genetic counseling for prostate cancer risk. Clin Genet 63 (3): 169-76, 2003. [PubMed: 12694223]
- Bruner DW, Baffoe-Bonnie A, Miller S, et al.: Prostate cancer risk assessment program. A model for the early detection of prostate cancer. Oncology (Huntingt) 13 (3): 325-34; discussion 337-9, 343-4 pas, 1999. [PubMed: 10204154]
- American Cancer Society: Cancer Facts and Figures 2019. Atlanta, Ga: American Cancer Society, 2019. Available online. Last accessed June 7, 2019.
- Steinberg GD, Carter BS, Beaty TH, et al.: Family history and the risk of prostate cancer. Prostate 17 (4): 337-47, 1990. [PubMed: 2251225]
- Carter BS, Beaty TH, Steinberg GD, et al.: Mendelian inheritance of familial prostate cancer. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 89 (8): 3367-71, 1992. [PMC free article: PMC48868] [PubMed: 1565627]
- Lesko SM, Rosenberg L, Shapiro S: Family history and prostate cancer risk. Am J Epidemiol 144 (11): 1041-7, 1996. [PubMed: 8942435]
- Grönberg H, Damber L, Damber JE, et al.: Segregation analysis of prostate cancer in Sweden: support for dominant inheritance. Am J Epidemiol 146 (7): 552-7, 1997. [PubMed: 9326432]
- Schaid DJ, McDonnell SK, Blute ML, et al.: Evidence for autosomal dominant inheritance of prostate cancer. Am J Hum Genet 62 (6): 1425-38, 1998. [PMC free article: PMC1377141] [PubMed: 9585590]
- Carter BS, Bova GS, Beaty TH, et al.: Hereditary prostate cancer: epidemiologic and clinical features. J Urol 150 (3): 797-802, 1993. [PubMed: 8345587]
- Bratt O, Kristoffersson U, Lundgren R, et al.: Sons of men with prostate cancer: their attitudes regarding possible inheritance of prostate cancer, screening, and genetic testing. Urology 50 (3): 360-5, 1997. [PubMed: 9301698]
- Pienta KJ, Esper PS: Risk factors for prostate cancer. Ann Intern Med 118 (10): 793-803, 1993. [PubMed: 8470854]
- Giovannucci E: How is individual risk for prostate cancer assessed? Hematol Oncol Clin North Am 10 (3): 537-48, 1996. [PubMed: 8773495]
- Neuhausen SL, Skolnick MH, Cannon-Albright L: Familial prostate cancer studies in Utah. Br J Urol 79 (Suppl 1): 15-20, 1997. [PubMed: 9088268]
- Whittemore AS, Wu AH, Kolonel LN, et al.: Family history and prostate cancer risk in black, white, and Asian men in the United States and Canada. Am J Epidemiol 141 (8): 732-40, 1995. [PubMed: 7535977]
- Gaff CL, Aragona C, MacInnis RJ, et al.: Accuracy and completeness in reporting family history of prostate cancer by unaffected men. Urology 63 (6): 1111-6, 2004. [PubMed: 15183962]
- Weinrich SP, Faison-Smith L, Hudson-Priest J, et al.: Stability of self-reported family history of prostate cancer among African American men. J Nurs Meas 10 (1): 39-46, 2002 Spring-Summer. [PubMed: 12048968]
- Barqawi A, Gamito E, O'Donnell C, et al.: Herbal and vitamin supplement use in a prostate cancer screening population. Urology 63 (2): 288-92, 2004. [PubMed: 14972473]
- Stanford JL, Stephenson RA, Coyle LM, et al., eds.: Prostate Cancer Trends 1973-1995. Bethesda, Md: National Cancer Institute, 1999. NIH Pub. No. 99-4543. Also available online. Last accessed June 7, 2019.
- Taylor KL, DiPlacido J, Redd WH, et al.: Demographics, family histories, and psychological characteristics of prostate carcinoma screening participants. Cancer 85 (6): 1305-12, 1999. [PubMed: 10189136]
Psychosocial Issues in Familial Prostate Cancer
Introduction
Research to date has included survey, focus group, and correlation studies on psychosocial issues related to prostate cancer risk. (Refer to the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information about psychological issues related to genetic counseling for cancer risk assessment.) Genetic testing for pathogenic variants in genes with some association with prostate cancer risk is now available and has the potential to identify those at increased risk of prostate cancer. Having an understanding of the motivations of men who may consider genetic testing for inherited susceptibility to prostate cancer can help clinicians and researchers anticipate interest in testing. Further, these data may inform the nature and content of counseling strategies for men and their families, including consideration of the risks, benefits, decision-making issues, and informed consent for genetic testing.
Risk Perception
Knowledge about risk of prostate cancer is thought to be a factor influencing men’s decisions to pursue prostate cancer screening and, possibly, genetic testing.[1] A study of 79 African American men (38 of whom had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and the remainder who were unaffected but at high risk of prostate cancer) completed a nine-item telephone questionnaire assessing knowledge about hereditary prostate cancer. On a scale of 0 to 9, with 9 representing a perfect score, scores ranged from 3.5 to 9 with a mean score of 6.34. The three questions relating to genetic testing were the questions most likely to be incorrect. In contrast, questions related to inheritance of prostate cancer risk were answered correctly by the majority of subjects.[2] Overall, knowledge of hereditary prostate cancer was low, especially concepts of genetic susceptibility, indicating a need for increased education. An emerging body of literature is now exploring risk perception for prostate cancer among men with and without a family history. Table 12 provides a summary of studies examining prostate cancer risk perception.
Table 12. Summary of Cross-Sectional Studies of Prostate Cancer Risk Perception
Study Population | Sample Size | Proportion of Study Population That Accurately Reported Their Risk | Other Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Unaffected men with a family history of prostate cancer [3] | 120 men aged 40–72 y | 40% | |
FDR of men with prostate cancer [4] | 105 men aged 40–70 y | 62% | |
Men with brothers affected with prostate cancer [5] | 111 men aged 33–78 y | Not available | 38% of men reported their risk of prostate cancer to be the same or less than the average man. |
FDR of men with prostate cancer and a community sample [6] | 56 men with an FDR with prostate cancer and 100 men without an FDR with prostate cancer all older than 40 y | 57% | 29% of men with an FDR thought that they were at the same risk as the average man, and 14% believed that they were at somewhat lower risk than average. |
FDR = first-degree relative.
Study conclusions vary regarding whether first-degree relatives (FDRs) of prostate cancer patients accurately estimate their prostate cancer risk. Some studies found that men with a family history of prostate cancer considered their risk to be the same as or less than that of the average man.[5,6] Other factors, including being married, have been associated with higher prostate cancer risk perception.[7] A confounder in prostate cancer risk perception was confusion between benign prostatic hyperplasia and prostate cancer.[3]
Anticipated Interest in Genetic Testing for Risk of Prostate Cancer
A number of studies summarized in Table 13 have examined participants' interest in genetic testing, if such a test were available for clinical use. Factors found to positively influence the interest in genetic testing include the following:
- Advice of their primary care physician.[8]
- Combination of emotional distress and concern about prostate cancer treatment effects.[9]
- Having children.[10]
Findings from these studies were not consistent regarding the influence of race, education, marital status, employment status, family history, and age on interest in genetic testing. Study participants expressed concerns about confidentiality of test results among employers, insurers, and family and stigmatization; potential loss of insurability; and the cost of the test.[8] These concerns are similar to those that have been reported in women contemplating genetic testing for breast cancer predisposition.[11-16] Concerns voiced about testing positive for a pathogenic variant in a prostate cancer susceptibility gene included decreased quality of life secondary to interference with sex life in the event of a cancer diagnosis, increased anxiety, and elevated stress.[8]
Table 13. Summary of Cross-Sectional Studies of Anticipated Interest in Prostate Cancer Susceptibility Genetic Testing
Study Population | Sample Size | Percent Expressing Interest in Genetic Testing | Other Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Prostate screening clinic participants [17] | 342 men aged 40–97 y | 89% | 28% did not demonstrate an understanding of the concept of inherited predisposition to cancer. |
General population; 9% with positive family history [8] | 12 focus groups with a total of 90 men aged 18–70 y | All focus groups | |
African American men [18] | 320 men aged 21–98 y | 87% | Most participants could not distinguish between genetic susceptibility testing and a prostate-specific antigen blood test. |
Men with and without FDRs with prostate cancer [9] | 126 men aged >40 y; mean age 52.6 y | 24% definitely; 50% probably | |
Swedish men with an FDR with prostate cancer [3] | 110 men aged 40–72 y | 76% definitely; 18% probably | 89% definitely or probably wanted their sons to undergo genetic testing. |
Sons of Swedish men with prostate cancer [10] | 101 men aged 21–65 y | 90%; 100% of sons with two or three family members affected with prostate cancer | 60% expressed worry about having an increased risk of prostate cancer. |
Healthy outpatient males with no history of prostate cancer [19] | 400 men aged 40–69 y | 82% | |
Healthy African American males with no history of prostate cancer [20] | 413 African American men aged 40–70 y | 87% | Belief in the efficacy of and intention to undergo prostate cancer screening was associated with testing interest. |
Healthy Australian males with no history of prostate cancer [21] | 473 adult men | 66% definitely; 26% probably | 73% reported that they felt diet could influence prostate cancer risk. |
Males with prostate cancer and their unaffected male family members [22] | 559 men with prostate cancer; 370 unaffected male relatives | 45% of men affected with cancer; 56% of unaffected men | In affected men, younger age and test familiarity were predictors of genetic testing interest. In unaffected men, older age, test familiarity, and a PSA test within the last 5 y were predictors of genetic testing interest. |
FDR = first-degree relative; PSA = prostate-specific antigen.
Overall, these reports and a study that developed a conceptual model to look at factors associated with intention to undergo genetic testing [23] have shown a significant interest in genetic testing for prostate cancer susceptibility despite concerns about confidentiality and potential discrimination. These findings must be interpreted cautiously in predicting actual prostate cancer genetic test uptake once testing is available. In both Huntington disease and hereditary breast and ovarian cancers, hypothetical interest before testing was possible was much higher than actual uptake following availability of the test.[24,25]
In a sample comprised of undiagnosed men with and without a prostate cancer–affected FDR, older age and lower education levels were associated with lower levels of prostate cancer–specific distress (as measured by the 11-item Prostate Cancer Anxiety Subscale of the Memorial Anxiety Scale for Prostate Cancer); higher distress was associated with having more urinary symptoms.[26] In the same study, men with a prostate cancer–affected FDR who perceived their relative’s cancer as more threatening and who had a relative deceased from the disease reported higher distress. In general, prostate cancer–specific distress levels were low for both groups of men.
Screening for Prostate Cancer in Individuals at Increased Familial Risk
The proportion of prostate cancers attributed to hereditary causes is estimated to be 5% to 10%,[27] and the risk of prostate cancer increases with the number of blood relatives with prostate cancer and young age at onset of prostate cancer within families.[28] There is considerable controversy in prostate cancer about the use of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) measurement and digital rectal exam for prostate cancer early detection in the general population, with different organizations suggesting significantly different screening algorithms and age recommendations. (Refer to the PDQ summary on Prostate Cancer Treatment for more information about prostate cancer in the general population and the Interventions section of this summary for more information about inherited prostate cancer susceptibility.) This variation is likely to add to patient and provider confusion about recommendations for screening by members of hereditary cancer families or FDRs of prostate cancer patients. Psychosocial questions of interest include what individuals at increased risk understand about hereditary risk, whether informational interventions are associated with increased uptake of prostate cancer screening behaviors, and what the associated quality-of-life implications of screening are for individuals at increased risk. Also of interest is the role of the primary care provider in helping those at increased risk identify their risk and undergo age- and family-history–appropriate screening.
Screening behaviors
In most cancers, the goal of improved knowledge of hereditary risk can be translated rather easily into a desired increase in adherence to approved and recommended (if not proven) screening behaviors. This is complicated for prostate cancer screening by the lack of clear recommendations for men in both high-risk and general populations. (Refer to the Screening section of this summary for more information.) In addition, controversy exists with regard to the value of early diagnosis of prostate cancer. This creates uncertainty for patients and providers and challenges the psychosocial factors related to screening behavior.
Several small studies have examined the behavioral correlates of prostate cancer screening at average and increased prostate cancer risk based on family history; these are summarized in Table 14. In general, results appear contradictory regarding whether men with a family history are more likely to be screened than those not at risk and whether the screening is appropriate for their risk status. Furthermore, most of the studies had relatively small numbers of subjects, and the criteria for screening were not uniform, making generalization difficult.
Table 14. Summary of Studies of Behavioral Correlates for Prostate Cancer Screening
Study Population | Sample Size | Percent Undergoing Screening | Predictive Correlates for Screening Behavior |
---|---|---|---|
Unaffected men with at least one FDR with prostate cancer [29] | 82 men (aged ≥40 y; mean age 50.5 y) | PSA: | Aged >50 y. |
Annual income ≥ U.S. $40,000. | |||
50% reported PSA screening within the previous 14 mo. | History of PSA screening before study enrollment. | ||
Higher levels of self-efficacy and response efficacy for undergoing prostate cancer screening. | |||
Sons of men with prostate cancer [30] | 124 men (60 men with a history of prostate cancer aged 38–84 y, median age 59 y; 64 unaffected men aged 31–78 y, median age 55 y) | PSA: | 39.4% patient request. |
— Unaffected men: 95.3% reported ever having a PSA test. | |||
— Affected men: 71.7% reported ever having a PSA test before diagnosis. | |||
DRE: | |||
— Unaffected men: 96.9% reported ever having a DRE. | |||
— Affected men: 91.5% reported ever having a DRE before diagnosis. | 35.6% physician request. | ||
Both PSA and DRE: | |||
— Unaffected men: 93.8% had both procedures. | |||
— Affected men: 70.0% reported having both procedures before diagnosis. | |||
Unaffected men with and without an FDR with prostate cancer [6] | 156 men aged ≥40 y (56 men with an FDR; 100 men without an FDR) | PSA: | Older age. |
63% reported ever having a PSA test. | |||
FDRs reported higher disease vulnerability and less belief in disease prevention, but this did not result in increased prostate cancer screening when compared with those without an FDR. | |||
DRE: | |||
86% reported ever having a DRE. | |||
Unaffected Swedish men from families with a 50% probability of carrying a pathogenic variant in a dominant prostate cancer susceptibility gene [3] | 110 men aged 50–72 y | 68% of men aged ≥50 y were screened for prostate cancer. | More relatives with prostate cancer. |
Low score on the avoidance subscales of the Impact of Event Scale.[31] | |||
Brothers or sons of men with prostate cancer [32] | 136 men aged 40–70 y (72% were African American men) | PSA: | More relatives with prostate cancer. |
72% reported ever having a PSA test. | |||
— 73% within 1 y. | Older age. | ||
— 23% 1–2 y ago. | |||
— 4% >2 y ago. | |||
DRE: | Urinary symptoms. | ||
90% reported ever having had a DRE. | |||
— 60% within 1 y. | |||
— 23% 1–2 y ago. | 71% reported their physician had spoken to them about prostate cancer screening. | ||
— 17% >2 y ago. | |||
Unaffected men with and without an FDR with prostate cancer [33] | 166 men aged 40–80 y (83 men with an FDR; 83 men with no family history) | PSA: | Family history of prostate cancer. |
— FDR: 72% reported ever having had a PSA test. | |||
— No family history: 53% reported ever having had a PSA test. | Greater perceived vulnerability to developing prostate cancer. | ||
French brothers or sons of men with prostate cancer [34] | 420 men aged 40–70 y | PSA: | Younger age. |
More relatives with prostate cancer. | |||
Increased anxiety. | |||
88% adhered to annual PSA screening. | Married. | ||
Higher education. | |||
Previous history of prostate cancer screening. | |||
Data from unaffected African American men participating in AAHPC and data from the 1998 and 2000 NHIS [35] | Unaffected men aged 40–69 y: | PSA: | Younger age. |
AAHPC Cohort: | |||
— 45% reported ever having had a PSA test. | |||
— AAHPC Cohort: 134 men | African American men in 2000 NHIS: | ||
— 65% reported ever having had a PSA test. | |||
DRE: | |||
— NHIS 1998 Cohort: 5,583 men (683 African American, 4,900 white) | AAHPC Cohort: | Fewer relatives with prostate cancer. | |
— 35% reported ever having had a DRE. | |||
African American men in 1998 NHIS: | |||
— NHIS 2000 Cohort: 3,359 men (411 African American, 2,948 white) | — 45% reported ever having had a DRE. | ||
Unaffected African American men who participated in the 2000 NHIS [36] | 736 men aged ≥45 y | PSA: | Older age (≥50 y). |
Private or military health insurance. | |||
48% reported ever having had a PSA test. | Fair or poor health status. | ||
Family history of prostate cancer. |
AAHPC = African American Hereditary Prostate Cancer Study Network; DRE = digital rectal exam; FDR = first-degree relative; NHIS = National Health Interview Survey; PSA = prostate-specific antigen.
Psychosocial outcomes of screening in individuals at increased familial risk
Concern about developing prostate cancer: Although up to 50% of men in some studies who were FDRs of prostate cancer patients expressed some concern about developing prostate cancer,[5] the level of anxiety reported is typically relatively low and is related to lifetime risk rather than short-term risk.[3,5] The concern is also higher in men who are younger than his FDR was at the time when their prostate cancer was diagnosed.[5] Unmarried FDRs worried more about developing prostate cancer than did married men.[5] Men with higher levels of concern about developing prostate cancer also had higher estimates of personal prostate cancer risk and had a larger number of relatives diagnosed with prostate cancer.[5] In a Swedish study, only 3% of the 110 men surveyed said that worry about prostate cancer affected their daily life “fairly much,” and 28% said it affected their daily life "slightly."[3]
Baseline distress levels: Among men who self-referred for free prostate cancer screening, general and prostate cancer–related distress did not differ significantly between men who were FDRs of prostate cancer patients and men who were not.[37] Men with a family history of prostate cancer in the study had higher levels of perceived risk. In a Swedish study, male FDRs of prostate cancer patients who reported more worry about developing prostate cancer had higher Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) depression and anxiety scores than men with lower levels of worry. In that study, the average HADS depression and anxiety scores among FDRs was at the 75th percentile. Depression was associated with higher levels of personal risk overestimation.[3]
Distress experienced during prostate cancer screening: A study measured the anxiety and general quality of life experienced by 220 men with a family history of prostate cancer while undergoing prostate cancer screening with PSA tests.[32] In this group, 20% of the men experienced a moderate deterioration in their anxiety scores, and 20% experienced a minimal deterioration in health-related quality of life (HRQOL). The average period between assessments was 35 days, which encompassed PSA testing and a wait for results that averaged 15.6 days. Only men with normal PSA values (4 ng/mL or less) were assessed. Factors associated with deterioration in HRQOL included being age 50 to 60 years, having more than two relatives with prostate cancer, having an anxious personality, being well-educated, and having no children presently living at home. These authors stress that analysis of the impact of screening on FDRs should not rely solely on mean changes in scores, which may “mask diversity among responses, as illustrated by the proportion of subjects worsening during the screening process.” Given that these were men receiving what was considered a normal result and that a subset of men experienced screening-associated distress, this study suggests that interventions to reduce screening-related distress may be needed to encourage men at increased hereditary risk to comply with repeated requests for screening.
A study in the United Kingdom assessed predictors of psychological morbidity and screening adherence in FDRs of men with prostate cancer participating in a PSA screening study. One hundred twenty-eight FDRs completed measures assessing psychological morbidity, barriers, benefits, knowledge of PSA screening, and perceived susceptibility to prostate cancer. Overall, 18 men (14%) scored above the threshold for psychiatric morbidity, consistent with normal population ranges. Cancer worry was positively associated with health anxiety, perceived risk, and subjective stress. However, psychological morbidity did not predict PSA screening adherence. Only past screening behavior was found to be associated with PSA screening adherence.[38]
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Changes to This Summary (06/07/2019)
The PDQ cancer information summaries are reviewed regularly and updated as new information becomes available. This section describes the latest changes made to this summary as of the date above.
Updated National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN): Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian as reference 36.
Identifying Genes and Inherited Variants Associated With Prostate Cancer Risk
The Case-Control Studies subsection was extensively revised.
Clinical Application of Genetic Testing for Inherited Prostate Cancer
Updated NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Prostate Cancer, and NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Prostate Cancer Early Detection as references 3, 4, and 5, respectively. Also revised text to state that the NCCN Prostate Cancer treatment guideline states to test BRCA1/BRCA2, ATM, CHEK2, PALB2, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2 for men meeting specific testing indications.
Revised Table 2: Indications for Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer Risk.
The Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer Precision Oncology subsection was extensively revised.
Screening and Prevention Interventions in Familial Prostate Cancer
Updated NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Prostate Cancer Early Detection and NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment: Breast and Ovarian as references 11 and 12, respectively.
This summary is written and maintained by the PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of NCI. The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or NIH. More information about summary policies and the role of the PDQ Editorial Boards in maintaining the PDQ summaries can be found on the About This PDQ Summary and PDQ® - NCI's Comprehensive Cancer Database pages.
About This PDQ Summary
Purpose of This Summary
This PDQ cancer information summary for health professionals provides comprehensive, peer-reviewed, evidence-based information about the genetics of prostate cancer. It is intended as a resource to inform and assist clinicians who care for cancer patients. It does not provide formal guidelines or recommendations for making health care decisions.
Reviewers and Updates
This summary is reviewed regularly and updated as necessary by the PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Board members review recently published articles each month to determine whether an article should:
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- replace or update an existing article that is already cited.
Changes to the summaries are made through a consensus process in which Board members evaluate the strength of the evidence in the published articles and determine how the article should be included in the summary.
The lead reviewers for Genetics of Prostate Cancer are:
- Kathleen A. Calzone, PhD, RN, AGN-BC, FAAN (National Cancer Institute)
- Veda N. Giri, MD (Thomas Jefferson University)
- Suzanne M. O'Neill, MS, PhD, CGC
- Beth N. Peshkin, MS, CGC (Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University Medical Center)
- Susan K. Peterson, PhD, MPH (University of Texas, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center)
- Mark Pomerantz, MD (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
- Susan T. Vadaparampil, PhD, MPH (H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute)
- Catharine Wang, PhD, MSc (Boston University School of Public Health)
Any comments or questions about the summary content should be submitted to Cancer.gov through the NCI website's Email Us. Do not contact the individual Board Members with questions or comments about the summaries. Board members will not respond to individual inquiries.
Levels of Evidence
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The preferred citation for this PDQ summary is:
PDQ® Cancer Genetics Editorial Board. PDQ Genetics of Prostate Cancer. Bethesda, MD: National Cancer Institute. Updated <MM/DD/YYYY>. Available at: https://www.cancer.gov/types/prostate/hp/prostate-genetics-pdq. Accessed <MM/DD/YYYY>. [PMID: 26389227]
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- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Identifying Genes and Inherited Variants Associated With Prostate Cancer Risk
- Clinical Application of Genetic Testing for Inherited Prostate Cancer
- Screening and Prevention Interventions in Familial Prostate Cancer
- Prostate Cancer Risk Assessment
- Psychosocial Issues in Familial Prostate Cancer
- Changes to This Summary (06/07/2019)
- About This PDQ Summary
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