AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated a breast-cancer risk-prediction model that combines traditional risk factors and a polygenic risk score among a large group of women from diverse cohorts.
  • It assessed how well the model predicted actual breast cancer cases over a 5-year period, particularly focusing on women aged 50-70 in different countries.
  • Findings showed that incorporating the polygenic risk score improved identification rates of high-risk women, suggesting better strategies for risk reduction in line with clinical guidelines.

Article Abstract

Background: Rigorous evaluation of the calibration and discrimination of breast-cancer risk-prediction models in prospective cohorts is critical for applications under clinical guidelines. We comprehensively evaluated an integrated model incorporating classical risk factors and a 313-variant polygenic risk score (PRS) to predict breast-cancer risk.

Methods: Fifteen prospective cohorts from six countries with 239 340 women (7646 incident breast-cancer cases) of European ancestry aged 19-75 years were included. Calibration of 5-year risk was assessed by comparing expected and observed proportions of cases overall and within risk categories. Risk stratification for women of European ancestry aged 50-70 years in those countries was evaluated by the proportion of women and future cases crossing clinically relevant risk thresholds.

Results: Among women <50 years old, the median (range) expected-to-observed ratio for the integrated model across 15 cohorts was 0.9 (0.7-1.0) overall and 0.9 (0.7-1.4) at the highest-risk decile; among women ≥50 years old, these were 1.0 (0.7-1.3) and 1.2 (0.7-1.6), respectively. The proportion of women identified above a 3% 5-year risk threshold (used for recommending risk-reducing medications in the USA) ranged from 7.0% in Germany (∼841 000 of 12 million) to 17.7% in the USA (∼5.3 of 30 million). At this threshold, 14.7% of US women were reclassified by adding the PRS to classical risk factors, with identification of 12.2% of additional future cases.

Conclusion: Integrating a 313-variant PRS with classical risk factors can improve the identification of European-ancestry women at elevated risk who could benefit from targeted risk-reducing strategies under current clinical guidelines.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8743128PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyab036DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

risk
9
classical risk
8
risk factors
8
polygenic risk
8
cohorts countries
8
prospective cohorts
8
european ancestry
8
ancestry aged
8
prospective evaluation
4
breast-cancer
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!