We tested an additional 44 of these for association with disease and found a new tandem repeat marker, called RAI-3'd1, located downstream of the transcribed region of RAI, which was more strongly associated with breast cancer than any other marker we have tested (RR = 2.44 (1.41-4.23, p = 0.0008, all cases; RR = 6.29 (1.49-26.6), p = 0.01, cases up to 55 years of age).
The haplotype at chromosome 19q13.2-3 encompassing the three SNPs ASE-1 G-21A, RAI IVS1 A4364G and ERCC1 Asn118Asn have been associated with risk of breast cancer and lung cancer.
The likely explanation for our results is a common recessive genetic variant located in or near the gene RAI, which, when homozygous, conveys an increased risk of breast cancer.