Apr
01

How To Calculate Your Risk For Breast Cancer

By admin
How To Calculate Your Risk For Breast Cancer

Using known risk factors for breast cancer, mathematical models can be developed to help answer important questions.  These mathematical models are useful tools for researchers and for patients as follows:

  • 1. Research on risk factors – The Claus risk assessment model was used to discover the subpopulation of people who had an autosomal dominant genetic allele that increased their risk from 10% to 92%. This led to the discovery of the BRCA genes associated with breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer.
  • 2. Clinical trial eligibility – The Gail risk assessment model was developed to help researchers determine who to enroll in the NSAPB Breast Cancer Prevention Trials

where chemoprevention was shown to reduce breast cancer risk.

  • 3. Guidelines for doing BRCA testing – BRCA testing is very expensive and practically worthless if done on everyone (because it is so rare to be homozygous for BRCA1 or BRCA2). Mathematical models such as the BRCAPRO, BOADICEA, and Tyrer-Cuzick models can help determine what patients should undergo BRCA testing. The decision for testing is usually made when one of these models predicts a 10% or greater chance that there is a mutation of the BRCA1, BRCA2, or both genes.
  • 4. Guidelines for doing MRI screening for breast cancer - MRI screening for breast cancer is not a cost effective screening test for the general population, but in specific groups, there are clear cut reasons to do so. In general, screening MRI is recommended for women with 20-25% or greater lifetime risk of breast cancer. The BRCAPRO and Tyrer-Cuzick models have been used to help make clinical decisions about ordering MRIs for breast cancer screening.
  • 5. Guidelines for breast cancer therapy - The Gail model is used clinically to help

determine who should be put on tamoxifen or raloxifene for chemoprevention.  Other models have been used to help make decisions about breast cancer risk reduction with prophylactic mastectomy.

For these reasons, it is important to understand these models.  These models are collectively refered to as “risk assessment tools”.  The following paragraphs summarize the most popular and most widely used risk assessment tools.  Keep in mind that none of these risk assessment tools apply to breast cancer survivors.  No mathematical model has been widely accepted to determine cancer risk in cancer survivors. 

General Risk Assessment Tools

Gail Model:  The Gail model is a validated risk-assessment model that focuses primarily on nonhereditary risk factors, with limited information on family history.  It was developed by scientists at the National Cancer Institute and the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) to assist health care providers in discussing breast cancer risk to determine their eligibility for the Breast Cancer Prevention Trial.  The tool allows one to project a woman’s individual estimate of breast cancer risk over a five-year period of time and over her lifetime.  It also compares the woman’s risk calculation with the average risk for a woman of the same age.  The Gail Model is an on-line quiz that has 13 questions and is interactive.  This calculator is based on published risk statistics and methods gathered from peer-reviewed journals, and has been extensively tested for its validity. 

                                                                                                               

The major limitation of the Gail model is the inclusion of only first-degree relatives, which results in underestimating risk in the 50% of families with cancer in the paternal lineage and also takes no account of the age of onset of breast cancer.  It may underestimate risk in certain groups, such as obese patients.

                                                                                                

National Cancer Institute Model:  The NCI risk assessment tool is essentially a simplified Gail Model that also factors in race.  Race is a factor in determining breast cancer risk but is excluded when determining eligibility for clinical trials.  This tool is probably the most popular risk assessment tool available to the public as an on-line, interactive risk calculator.  The on-line quiz is a shorter, nine-point questionnaire that includes multiple factors, giving a woman her future five-year risk of breast cancer and her lifetime risk of breast cancer.

                                                                                             

The NCI tool does not account for a lot of risk factors that can be modified.  For this reason, it is difficult to use this test as a motivation tool to show people how lifestyle can alter their risk of breast cancer.  It also cannot be used in breast cancer survivors, in patients with DCIS, LCIS, or people who carry one of the BRCA genes.

BRCAPRO model:  This is a statistical model available as a computer program that uses two different algorithms to evaluate family history and helps a doctor determine the likelihood of finding either a BRCA1 mutation or a BRCA2 mutation in a family.  The results of this can be used to determine if BRCA testing is indicated.  This is very useful in light of the high cost of BRCA testing ($3,000).  None of the nonhereditary risk factors can yet be incorporated into the model, however.  In a comparison of four different methods for estimating breast cancer risk in patients with a family history of breast cancer, the BRCAPRO model was the least accurate.  It predicted only 49% of the breast cancers that actually occurred in the screened group of patients with a family history of breast cancer.

Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention Risk Assessment Tool:  This is another breast cancer risk assessment tool that includes more lifestyle factors than the NCI or Gail Model tools.  It has not been studied as extensively as the Gail Model or the simplified NCI model, but it is promising in that it includes many lifestyle factors that people can do to modify their risk of developing cancer.  It is also an on-line questionnaire that can be used by both women and men to estimate their breast cancer risk.

Making all this practical

 

          Now after a thorough and confusing discussion of all these statistical models, it’s time to make all this information practical.  What is the best way to help a patient accurately assess her risk of breast cancer and if possible, show her what positive factors are reducing her risk and what negative factors can be changed to reduce her risk?  If possible, it would also be great to show the patient the value and indications for testing, imaging, chemoprevention, and in some cases surgery.  A discussion of the practical aspect of each of these is addressed in a Q & A format below:

Q: What (free) online programs can be used to help a patient assess their risk of breast cancer?

A: Several of the risk assessment tools mentioned above can be accessed for free by the public. Here are the tests and their websites:

   

This is a great interactive questionnaire that calculates five-year and lifetime risk of breast cancer developed by the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention and made public online in 2000.  In 2005, they launched the Spanish version of the site, “Cuidar de su Salud”.  The risk calculator includes lifestyle factors such as weight, dietary vegetables, alcohol intake, as well as Jewish ethnicity.  It does not include other ethnicities, however, and is not accurate for BRCA mutation carriers or breast cancer survivors.  Despite these issues, this is by far the best free online risk calculator since it is very interactive and gives you a personalized description of your risk in the form of a colored bar graph, which they can electronically manipulate to experience “virtual” risk reduction.  The bar graph is a seven-level scale that compares users to a typical man or woman your age.  Users learn where to focus their prevention efforts and how to make lifestyle changes by “clicking on” personalized strategies.  With each click, the bar graph shrinks, and the user watches his/her predicted risk drop.  This is a great concept to motivate people to participate and comply with lifestyle modification measures.

  • 2. The NCI Risk Assessment Tool -regular web: http://www.cancer.gov/bcrisktool

     This is the easy to use, on-line questionnaire based on a modified Gail model that also includes ethnicity.  It does not factor in a personal history of breast cancer, DCIS, or LCIS.  It does not account for other factors such as BRCA status, hormonal replacement therapy, lifestyle factors, breast feeding, menopause, or mammographic density.  Despite these issues, it is a very useful tool that gives a woman her five-year and lifetime risk of breast cancer.  It is the only risk assessment tool that can be used via mobile handheld devices (any type).  A version of this can be downloaded for PDAs with Windows Pocket PC operating system as well.

Q:  What programs can be used to help a doctor make decisions about ordering a breast MRI?

  

A:  The American Cancer Society has developed some very good guidelines for breast cancer screening with MRI.  It should be emphasized that MRI is an adjunct to mammography, not a replacement.  

Question and Answer


….cancer?
its been about 2 months since I've posted anything about throat sicknesses and i got over everything but last week or so i noticed my lymph gland is stiill swollen…..oh and i noticed a lump in my armpit it appeared a couple weeks ago i thought it was an ingrown hair but it isnt…

you think its related to cancer?

Mai Brooks
About the Author:

Dr. Mai Brooks is a surgical oncologist/general surgeon, with expertise in early detection and prevention of cancer. More at www.drbrooksmd.com, thecancerexperience.wordpress.com and progressreportoncancer.wordpress.com.

Categories : Healthcare

15 Comments

1

Cancer isn't "genetic" in the sense that "You will have cancer if your parents did". Genetics is far more of a crapshoot, and is also affected by what occurs during an organisms growth. Even if you inhereted a sensitivity to specific types of cancer, chances are that you may never encounter the required stimuli to trigger the cancer itself. You can seek genetic counciling if its a big concern in your family tree.

Cancer can be treated by surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy, monoclonal antibody therapy or other methods, and there are even new recombinant drug treatments and DNA tagging experimentations that are constantly being tested on the fringe of science. If you'd like a complete rundown of each of these treatments, visit my source link for more.

2

truthfully, anything can be related to cancer.

We cant diagnose you with cancer over the Internet. Go to the doctor. If you need antibiotics, that's the only place you can get them. Besides, if you do have an infection that has been going on for 2 months, you need medicine to help you. If you ignore the symptoms then the bacteria can get into your blood and that IS fatal.

Go to the doctor, you'll be fine :)

3

As a rule, there is no cure for esophageal cancer. There is a surgical procedure that can be performed but if it has already metastasized to other organs it's probably already too advanced. Prognosis for this time of cancer is usually 5 yrs max…..but that's for strictly esophageal cancer. Depending on what other organs are involved, that time would likely be reduced.

Because it effects the esophageous, eating can become very difficult so it's important for him to take supplements like Ensure to keep his strength. Most people with esophageal cancer lose a lot of weight.

4

The BBC use buly boy balliffs to ensure they get their money from single parent mothers who simply cannot afford the hundreds of pounds they’re being asked for, often seizing goods from families with very liitle, in order to pay grossly inflated wage packets. Well done BBC.

5

woulda been funny if the dirt flew in his face lmao

6

Yeah cuz your friend’s video has been up for 5 minutes.

XD

7

It tends to occur more frequently in epithelial tissue because this type of tissue reproduces most frequently. Since it is the replication of cells that goes awry in cancer, it would follow that we would see cancer more frequently in cell types that divide more frequently.

We are also more likely to see cancers in places that are most commonly exposed to carcinogens such as UV radition and environmental toxins. So for this reason, some of the most common cancer places for cancer are the skin, the lungs and the digestive track.

10

Cancer of all types is rare in young people.

Women are advised to begin breast self-exams at 20. Besides that, just be conscious of changes in your body and discuss concerns with your doctor as appropriate.

The number one killer of young people is accidents. Tens of thousands of young people die accidentally every year. Motor vehicle accidents are the biggest killer. But falls, drowning, shootings, and drug-related incidents take a terrible toll as well. Here is how to increase your chances of dying from old age:

1) Always wear a seat belt.

2) Obey the speed limit.

3) Never drive drunk or impaired. Don't be a passenger of someone who is drunk or impaired.

4) Wear a helmet on motorcycles and bikes.

5) Learn to swim, never swim alone, never swim at night, and never swim while drunk or impaired.

6) Stay away from ladders and roofs.

7) Stay away from situations where illegal drugs may be present

8) Do not handle firearms unless you have completed a firearms safety class.

11

Not all viruses are RNA viruses – but this is an intelligent question.
Most viruses insert a message that says "make more of me"
- – more viral particles.
The DNA damage of malignancies turns off the cellular control mechanisms that tell cells to stop dividing – so cells divide / reproduce without control as you say.
The differences is reproduction of cells vs reproduction of viral particles.

There are over 26,000 genes in the human genome.
Damage to each one has different consequences.
Nothing is simple in the human body, and it gets more complicated each year as brilliant researchers unravel the mechanisms of function associated with each gene.

There are some very smart people on this site who can explain this in much more elaborate detail if they see this question. Good question. You are thinking.
That's what I ask of my students first and foremost – think.

There are viruses associated with some human malignancies.
I think we will find more of these in the future.

12

I'm sorry for your pain and undiagnosed health issues… Try not to get discouraged and never give up. I went to 15 doctors, including specialists, over 17 years until I was diagnosed with Lyme disease. The Lyme literate doctor (LLD) that finally diagnosed me had the disease and was able to clinically diagnosis it during my first visit–a blood test confirmed it.

Because you have had Lyme, I strongly recommend finding a Lyme literate doctor. A LLD can rule out Lyme and point you in the right direction, if need be. Do not assume that all infectious disease doctors are LLD…

You seem to have a number of issues: lump on neck w/ pain, chest pain, pain in left side, joint pain, back pain & burning *tick bite turns red, headaches, hearing loss. The following information regarding your symptoms and Lyme disease was obtained from Lymeinfo.net. Please do not misunderstand and mistake this as an attempt to diagnosis Lyme. It is only information. Again, I strongly recommend finding a qualified physician.

Perhaps the multisystem involvement and the site of your tick bite getting red again are all clues?…

The following symptoms you described, are some I also have—chest pain, neck pain & stiffness, joint pain, back pain, headaches, hearing loss, and left side pain.

The following link is to a file with a list of 70 peer-reviewed studies showing that Lyme disease can persist or relapse despite antibiotic therapy. http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDPersist.pdf

"Lyme is known as the new great imitator."

"Burning is quite specific to neuropsychiatric Lyme disease (NPLD), but is also seen in herpes infections. The patient describes a sensation that a blowtorch is burning the skin. It can affect any part of the body. In some patients the burning migrates, while in others it remains in a given area. Both antibiotics and anticonvulsants relieve this symptom."
http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/tnaold.html

SPLEEN
SPLENITIS
“Severe left upper quadrant pain… A splenectomy was performed. Histologic examination of the tissue sections revealed extensive necrosis and inflammation” (1)

(1) Human necrotizing splenitis caused by Borrelia burgdorferi.
Rank EL, Dias SM; Hasson J; Duray PH; Johnson RC; Magnarelli LA; Fister RD.
Am J Clin Pathol, 91(4):493-8. 1989.
http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDSymptoms.pdf (p. 13)
http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDSymptoms.pdf (p. 49)

HEAD/NECK
Lyme can affect the head and neck.
“We review our institutional experience with 266 patients with Lyme disease, 75% of whom experienced head and neck symptoms.”

HEADACHE
“typically intermittent (hours)… but could be generalized or persistent.” [some] “had excruciating headache” (1)

“Our patients show that headache can be the first, and for a long time the only, prominent sign of Lyme neuroborreliosis” (2)

“headaches resembling migraine,… tension-type headache… we conclude that recent-onset headaches are common in patients hospitalized with Lyme disease.” (3)
http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDSymptoms.pdf (p. 5)

HEART
“Lyme carditis may occur at any age and in either sex… The time interval between the tick bite and the occurrence of cardiac manifestations may be as short as 10 days…The diagnosis of Lyme carditis can be difficult, since the clinical pattern can be very heterogeneous…”

“Lyme carditis is becoming a more frequent complication of Lyme disease, primarily due to the increasing incidence of this disease in the United States. Cardiovascular manifestations of Lyme disease often occur within 21 days of exposure and include fluctuating degrees of atrioventricular (AV) block, acute myopericarditis or mild left ventricular dysfunction and rarely cardiomegaly or fatal pericarditis. AV block can vary from first-, second-, third-degree heart block, to junctional rhythm and asystolic pauses.” (1)
http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDSymptoms.pdf (P. 15)

HEARING LOSS
“Otolaryngologic manifestations have been reported in all stages of the disease.”
Otolaryngologic aspects of Lyme disease.
Moscatello AL; Worden DL; Nadelman RB; Wormser G; Lucente F.
Laryngoscope, 101(6 Pt 1):592-5. 1991.

“Bilateral hearing loss was noted in 4 patients” (1)
“bilateral deafness and multiple other neurological complaints some six months after developing a 'target' lesion on the lower leg” (2)

“[Lyme disease] has been shown to cause asymmetrical sensorineural hearing loss” (3)
“Among the 27 patients, associated symptoms included fatigue (74 percent), headache (48 percent), arthritis (37 percent), and hearing loss (15 percent).” (4)
http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDSymptoms.pdf (p. 7)

KIDNEY
“Infection caused by B burgdorferi is known to induce glomerulonephritis in animals."
http://www.lymeinfo.net/medical/LDSymptoms.pdf (p. 13)

You may search in over 5,000 medical and scientific articles about Lyme disease at the following site: http://search.lymenet.org/

It is always a good idea to eat a healthy diet and avoid unhealthy foods and habits.

Best wishes for vibrant health in the coming year!

13

its only been up for like 20 minutes, besides it has about 200 now that I’m watching.

14

We all possess a gene for cancer. Even scientist don't know why some get it nd others don't. Cancer cells don't care how young you are or how healthy you are. If it manifest itself, then it will. Its almost like they have a mind of their own. My sister-in-law never smoked, always ate well and at 33 developed breast cancer which later traveled to her lungs and killed her. it is no respecter of anyone. My own sister never smoked either. In fact she's the only one who didn't. She developed breast cancer and 15 yrs later got brain cancer. No one knows why, we can only hope that scientist can pin point the whys someday. Be blessed

15

Yes. A very good friend of mine, who took great care of himself had picked up Pancreatic Cancer. He lasted only a few months.

I do not have an answer, except that in spite of what we do, we can't control the hidden destiny. Smokers can live to old age, and the good die young.

Another friend of mine was diagnosed with cancer and given just days to live. 25 years later, he is totally cured. He has a very unusual look at life today.

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