Your genetic counselor will help you figure out if your family history suggests an inherited pattern to the cases of breast cancer — and perhaps ovarian and other types of cancer — that have occurred. If so, a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation may be causing the cancer in your family. The only way to know for sure is to undergo genetic testing.
Genetic testing results are most meaningful when the process begins with a family member who has already been diagnosed with breast cancer or ovarian cancer. That may be you, or it may be your mother, aunt, sister, or another family member. Here’s why:
Sometimes, there are no living relatives with cancer who can undergo genetic testing. A genetic counselor can help you decide who in the family is the best person to test and why.
Once a person has been found to have a BRCA mutation, it makes the most sense to proceed by testing the relative most closely related to her (or him). If that next relative does not have it, she or he could not have passed it on to children. For example:
These are just two possible scenarios. Your genetic counselor can help you determine what is right for you and your family’s situation.
Most experts advise against testing children under age 18 because no safe, effective therapies currently exist to help prevent breast cancer in children so young. Furthermore, children are not yet old enough to decide for themselves whether they want information about their lifetime cancer risks. It is also possible that by the time today’s children reach adulthood, scientists will have discovered a new treatment to correct abnormal breast cancer genes before cancer has a chance to develop.
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