1 / 40

Understanding Hereditary Cancers

Understanding Hereditary Cancers. Brittany Burnett, MS, CGC Certified Genetic Counselor John Muir/Mt. Diablo Health System Cancer Centers. Genes in the News. Factors Affecting Whether Any Person Gets Cancer. Carcinogens. Modifier genes. Response to DNA damage.

marsha
Download Presentation

Understanding Hereditary Cancers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Hereditary Cancers Brittany Burnett, MS, CGC Certified Genetic Counselor John Muir/Mt. Diablo Health System Cancer Centers

  2. Genes in the News

  3. Factors Affecting Whether Any Person Gets Cancer Carcinogens Modifier genes Response to DNA damage Hormonal/ reproductive factors

  4. Many Mutations Lead to Cancer Normal Cell First Mutation Second Mutation Third Mutation Malignant Cells Fourth or Later Mutation

  5. Acquired Mutations Normal Bone Cell Mutation Occurs Altered Gene Altered Bone Cells Normal Bone Cells

  6. Hereditary Mutations Egg Sperm Mutation Occurs Fertilized Egg Mutation Reproductive Bone Pancreas Brain Body Cells of Offspring

  7. Many Mutations Lead to Cancer Normal Cell First Mutation Second Mutation Third Mutation Malignant Cells Fourth or Later Mutation

  8. Different Genes – Different Functions Bone Cell Pancreas Cell Brain Cell

  9. Most Cancer Is NOT Inherited All Breast Cancer Patients Known Inherited Factor Unknown Factor(s)

  10. Searching Disease Families Disease Present Cancer gene markers Cancer gene Disease Absent

  11. Disease-Linked Genes Cancer gene markers Cancer gene

  12. DNA Cell Nucleus Chromosomes Gene DNA molecule (chromosome)

  13. DNA Molecules Cell Nucleus Chromosomes

  14. How many genes are we talkin’? Chromosome X

  15. Chemical Bases in DNA Gene Chemical bases DNA molecule (chromosome) A T C G

  16. DNA->RNA->Protein Cell membrane DNA Nucleus Chain of amino acids DNA bases mRNA Gene Protein Ribosome

  17. Altered DNA->Altered Protein Cell membrane DNA Nucleus Chain of amino acids DNA bases mRNA Gene Protein Ribosome

  18. Gene Mutations Frameshift Deletion Mismatch Duplication Deletion

  19. Gene Tests – Three Common Methods Mutation Absent Mutation Present Chromosome DNA Protein

  20. Microarray Analysis 1.5 x 103 cells TotalRNA cDNA cDNA microarrays RNA prep (10–50 ng) oligo(dT) cDNA libraries EST sequencing High-throughput gene expression analysis

  21. Technical Concerns

  22. Searching Disease Families Disease Present Cancer gene markers Cancer gene Disease Absent

  23. Genetic Tests Find Mutations, NOT Disease Chances of Developing Breast Cancer by Age 65 100 100 90 90 80 80 70 70 60 60 50 50 40 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 Normal BRCA1 Altered BRCA1

  24. What are some of the cancer syndromes? • Breast cancer genes: BRCA1, BRCA2, p53, PTEN • Colon cancer genes: MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, APC • Melanoma genes: p16, others • Renal/kidney cancer genes: pVHL, others • Prostate cancer genes: MSR1, ??

  25. What’s my risk for cancer?

  26. Need to determine if testing is reasonable Evaluate for all cancer syndromes Keep up with changing information on diagnosis and testing methods Psychological and social impact on the patient and his/her family Long-term follow-up The Genetic Counseling Process

  27. Importance of Family History

  28. Age and cause of death Physical findings Environmental exposures Anyone with previous testing? Origin of cancer(s) Age of onset Unilateral/bilateral 2nd Primaries Current cancer surveillance Ethnic background The Questions We Ask…

  29. Benefits of Gene Testing • Relief • Fewer Checkups • Informed Decisions • Intervention

  30. Limitations of Gene Testing Mutation Present But: • May Never Lead to Disease • May Go Undetected

  31. Major Limitations of Gene Testing

  32. What Happens If We Find a Mutation? Positive genetic test result Possible testing for other adult relatives Increased surveillance Lifestyle changes Chemo- prevention Prophylactic surgery

  33. Psychological Consequences

  34. Who Should Know?

  35. Confidentiality Concerns

  36. Personal Decision

  37. Difficult Decision 100 50 40 30 20 10 0 Percent of Population Don’t Want To Know Want To Know

  38. Importance of Genetic Counselors

  39. Thank you for listening! If you would like more information about cancer genetics for yourself, a friend or family member, Call (925) 674-2581 and we’ll be happy to speak with you. Or just ask your doctor if it’s right for you. Thanks again, Brittany Burnett, MS, CGC

More Related