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B.C. initiative aims to expand genetic screening for Ashkenazi Jewish people at risk of hereditary cancers

- Moira Wyton

The final gift Catriona Re‐ mocker's father gave her was discovered by a lab in a vial of his blood.

Dr. Geoffrey Remocker died of Stage IV prostate can‐ cer in 2016, just two weeks af‐ ter testing confirmed he was a carrier for genetic mutations that increase the likelihood of developing ovarian, breast, prostate and pancreatic can‐ cers.

These hereditary BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations are ten times more common among both men and women of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, like Remocker and her father, than non-Jewish people.

About one in 40 individu‐ als with Ashkenazi heritage carry the mutations, accord‐ ing to the U.S. Centre for Dis‐ ease Control, which increase the likelihood of women de‐ veloping ovarian cancer, for example, from one per cent to 30 per cent before age 70.

Both men and women are at risk, though most people know only of their links to breast and ovarian cancer.

"It's not guaranteed that you will develop cancer, but there may be a mutation in a gene that is associated with cancer that puts you at the higher risk," said Dr. Sophie

Sun, co-director of B.C. Can‐ cer's Hereditary Cancer pro‐ gram.

The increased risk is likely because founding members of the Ashkenazi Jewish com‐ munity, in Central and East‐ ern Europe, had such muta‐ tions and then reproduced in relative isolation.

WATCH | How genetic testing helped this B.C. woman reduce her cancer risk

But without a family histo‐ ry of cancer, Remocker says she was "shocked and sur‐ prised" to find out her father was a carrier, and later, that she carries the mutation as well.

"We didn't know that as people with Jewish heritage we were at increased risk," said Remocker, who cofounded non-profit BRCA in BC with her mother, Jane Re‐ mocker.

The Remockers are now teaming up with B.C. Cancer's Hereditary Cancer program to expand genetic testing for

Jewish people in B.C. to save them the same shock and pain.

Ashkenazi Jewish people in B.C. qualify for free genetic testing if they have a history of cancer in their families, Sun said.

But due to genocide dur‐ ing the Holocaust and dis‐ placement, many people don't know they have such heritage or that their risk of certain cancers, among both men and women, are height‐ ened.

An imminent pilot project, largely funded by Vancouver's Diamond Foundation, will study the prevalence of the BRCA mutations among Ashkenazi Jewish peoples in B.C. and aims to offer free, vol‐ untary genetic testing to everyone with that heritage, regardless of family cancer history.

Early detection of the mu‐ tations when one is young and healthy can help avoid in‐ vasive treatments if cancer does develop and there‐ by save lives, said Sun.

"Some of these cancers are potentiall­y preventabl­e," she said.

Empowermen­t through early detection

Knowing she carried the gene allowed Remocker, now 39, to qualify for regular scans and take measures to reduce her risk of developing cancer, including a mastectomy to re‐ move her breast tissue before the recommende­d age of 40.

"I'm a lot more empow‐ ered and I have a lot more tools to deal with it and to do something about my risk," said Remocker. "It was really hard watching my dad go through what he went through and that's certainly not something I want for my‐ self."

Sun says people should get as familiar with their fami‐ ly histories as possible, and speak to a doctor or visit the Hereditary Cancer program website to see if they are eligi‐ ble for free testing.

But raising awareness among the Jewish community in B.C. is difficult, said Re‐ mocker. There are only around 35,000 Jewish people in B.C, according to a 2019 es‐ timate from the Jewish Feder‐ ations of North America, and Remocker says they are more "fragmented" than in other cities with more establishe­d Jewish communitie­s and dedi‐ cated hospitals.

Remocker hopes spread‐ ing the word will ensure oth‐ ers can make the decision to get tested for the mutations without having to lose a loved one.

She said that it was "really important that we start to de‐ velop more of a voice for Jew‐ ish people in the province around these health issues."

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