- Narod, SA;
- Neuhausen, S;
- Vichodez, G;
- Armel, S;
- Lynch, HT;
- Ghadirian, P;
- Cummings, S;
- Olopade, O;
- Stoppa-Lyonnet, D;
- Couch, F;
- Wagner, T;
- Warner, E;
- Foulkes, WD;
- Saal, H;
- Weitzel, J;
- Tulman, A;
- Poll, A;
- Nam, R;
- Sun, P;
- the Hereditary Breast Cancer Study Group
Men with BRCA2 mutations have been found to be at increased risk of developing prostate cancer. There is a recent report that BRCA2 carriers with prostate cancer have poorer survival than noncarrier prostate cancer patients. In this study, we compared survival of men with a BRCA2 mutation and prostate cancer with that of men with a BRCA1 mutation and prostate cancer. We obtained the age at diagnosis, age at death or current age from 182 men with prostate cancer from families with a BRCA2 mutation and from 119 men with prostate cancer from families with a BRCA1 mutation. The median survival from diagnosis was 4.0 years for men with a BRCA2 mutation vs 8.0 years for men with a BRCA1 mutation, and the difference was highly significant (P<0.01). It may be important to develop targeted chemotherapies to treat prostate cancer in men with a BRCA2 mutation.