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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

Rewrite Association between polygenic risk and survival in breast cancer patients as a headline for a science magazine post, using no more than 7 words

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
August 28, 2025
in Cancer
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Association between polygenic risk and survival in breast cancer patients

BMC Cancer

volume 25, Article number: 1393 (2025)
Cite this article

AbstractSection
Background
Polygenic risk scores (PRS) estimate an individual’s germline genetic predisposition to a quantitative trait and/or risk of disease. Several PRS have been developed for cancer risk with the goal of improved risk screening. Here, we sought to establish whether PRS for cancer risk and other common traits may influence survival for patients with cancer.

AbstractSection
Methods
We conducted a PRS survival analysis using 23,770 cancer patients of European ancestry from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Profile cohort.

AbstractSection
Results
We identified an association between PRS for breast cancer risk and longer patient survival (HR = 0.89 (95% CI: 0.84–0.95), p = 1.50 × 10–4, < 5% FDR), implying that individuals at high genetic risk had better outcomes. High PRS individuals were also significantly less likely to harbor somatic TP53 mutations, consistent with having less aggressive tumors. This association persisted when including tumor grade and became more protective when restricting to ER-negative tumors (HR = 0.78 (95% CI: 0.68–0.89), p = 1.69 × 10–4). Potential confounders such as hormone receptor status, age, grade, stage, and ER-targeted therapy did not fully explain this association, nor was there statistical evidence of index event bias at individual variants. We did not observe significant associations between cancer risk and survival for other cancers, suggesting that this mechanism may be largely unique to breast cancer. However, we did observe associations between shorter survival and type 2 diabetes, bipolar, and pancreatitis PRS (1% FDR).

AbstractSection
Conclusions
These findings suggest that higher germline risk may predispose individuals to less aggressive breast cancer tumors and provide novel insights into breast cancer development and prognosis.

Kurant, D.E., Groha, S., Ding, Y. et al. Association between polygenic risk and survival in breast cancer patients.
BMC Cancer 25, 1393 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-14640-9

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-14640-9 bu içeriği en az 2500 kelime olacak şekilde ve alt başlıklar ve madde içermiyecek şekilde ünlü bir science magazine için İngilizce olarak yeniden yaz. Teknik açıklamalar içersin ve viral olacak şekilde İngilizce yaz. Haber dışında başka bir şey içermesin. Haber içerisinde en az 14 paragraf ve her bir paragrafta da en az 50 kelime olsun. Cevapta sadece haber olsun. Ayrıca haberi yazdıktan sonra içerikten yararlanarak aşağıdaki başlıkların bilgisi var ise haberin altında doldur. Eğer bilgi yoksa ilgili kısmı yazma.:

Subject of Research:

Article Title:

Article References:

Kurant, D.E., Groha, S., Ding, Y. et al. Association between polygenic risk and survival in breast cancer patients.
BMC Cancer 25, 1393 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-14640-9

Image Credits: Scienmag.com

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-14640-9

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