Abstract
Background
Women treated for breast cancer have an increased
risk for developing metachronous contralateral breast cancer (CBC).
Patient perception of this risk is often overestimated and has been
found to contribute to the decision to undergo contralateral
prophylactic mastectomy. An individual's risk is dependent on both
patient and tumor characteristics. This review examines and summarizes
the current literature on the factors that affect CBC risk.
Data Sources
English-language
publications with the keyword “contralateral breast cancer” were
identified through a MEDLINE literature search.
Conclusions
The global incidence of CBC is decreasing, a trend that is attributed to more effective adjuvant therapies. Patients with
BRCA
germ-line mutations demonstrate the highest risk for CBC. In the
absence of known genetic mutations,
patients with strong family
histories who are diagnosed at young ages (<35 years) with estrogen
receptor–negative index tumors appear to have a higher incidence of CBC.
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