Abstract Background: Young BRCA carriers may undergo breast conserving surgery (BCS) or mastectomy with or without contralateral risk reducing mastectomy at the time of an index breast cancer diagnosis. A variety of factors may influence surgical decision making. Methods: The BRCA BCY Collaboration (NCT03673306) is an international, hospital-based, retrospective cohort study conducted at 109 centres across 5 continents including women with germline pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants (PV) in BRCA1/2 diagnosed between 2000 and 2020 with invasive stage I-III breast cancer prior to or at age 40 years. The primary objective of the present analysis was to evaluate surgical management in these patients. Breast surgery was defined as BCS, unilateral mastectomy, or bilateral mastectomy administered as part of primary treatment for a first diagnosis of invasive breast cancer. Multivariable logistic regression was used to determine factors associated with receipt of bilateral mastectomy. Results: Of 5660 eligible BRCA1/2 carriers, 4715 had unilateral stage I-III breast cancer with surgical treatment details available. The median age of the cohort was 35 years (IQR, 31-38 years). Overall, 1805 (38.3%) patients underwent BCS, 1752 (37.2%) underwent unilateral mastectomy, and 1158 (24.6%) underwent bilateral mastectomy. The proportion of young BRCA1/2 carriers undergoing BCS decreased over the study period (55.7% in 2000 vs. 27.0% in 2020), whereas the use of bilateral mastectomy significantly increased (8.0% in 2000 vs. 44.4% in 2020). Bilateral mastectomy was more common in women who had genetic testing performed before (57.0%) or within 6 months of a breast cancer diagnosis (38.5%), compared to those tested after diagnosis (5.1%, p0.001). On multivariable analysis, compared to those tested after diagnosis, earlier genetic testing remained the strongest predictor of bilateral mastectomy receipt (testing prior to diagnosis: OR 20.7 95% CI 15.3-28.1; testing at diagnosis: OR 6.8 95% CI 5.4-8.7). Other predictors of bilateral mastectomy receipt included geographic region, later year of diagnosis, smaller tumor size, node negative disease, and neoadjuvant treatment. In subgroup analysis including 2327 patients who had genetic testing performed before or within 6 months of diagnosis, 42.0% underwent bilateral mastectomy, with the lowest rates reported in Asia/Africa (26.1%) and the highest rates reported in North America (66.4%, p0.001). In adjusted subgroup analyses, BRCA1 PV, later year of diagnosis, smaller tumor size, node negative disease, neoadjuvant treatment, and geographic region remained independently associated with bilateral mastectomy. Conclusions: In this large, international study of young affected BRCA carriers, geographic region and timing of genetic testing strongly impacted surgical management. These data support early genetic testing for young women with breast cancer to help optimize local therapy decisions. Citation Format: S. M. Wong, E. Blondeaux, V. Delucchi, F. Coussy, R. Bernstein Molho, S. Linn, A. Di Meglio, A. Kwong, K. Pogoda, E. Agostinetto, I. Nevelsteen, J. Balmana, H. C. Moore, A. Toss, A. Ferrari, C. Rousset-Jablonski, T. Renaud, K. Phillips, F. A. PeccatorI, M. Agustina Ipina, S. Paluch-Shimon, J. Ryu, W. Kui, M. Lee, R. Fruscio, M. Rozenblit, C. Vernieri, A. Matikas, M. Dieci, F. J. Couch, L. De Marchis, S. E. Hwang, D. Aguilar-y Mendez, D. Can Guven, M. Swain, C. Gianni, S. Spinaci, G. Montagna, M. Lambertini, H. Kim. Surgical management of young BRCA1/2 carriers with early onset breast cancer abstract. In: Proceedings of the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium 2025; 2025 Dec 9-12; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Clin Cancer Res 2026;32(4 Suppl):Abstract nr PD12-01.
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