When Tracey Hutchinson was diagnosed with breast cancer, her twin sister Tania was told it was only a matter of time. or signup to continue reading "Our GP said, 'it's not if she'll get breast cancer, it's almost when'," Tracey told AAP. The mother of three was diagnosed during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in June 2020 after finding a lump in her breast tissue.

Within nine days, Tracey had a biopsy, a mammogram, an appointment with a breast surgeon, and her first lumpectomy. She went under the knife twice in two weeks, but the cancer persisted so she had a mastectomy. After 14 months of breast cancer treatment and 12 rounds of chemotherapy for a secondary cancer, Tracey is now more than four years cancer-free.

But Tania's health weighs on her mind. "Almost one-in-three women will get breast cancer, but being identical twins, our genetics are the same, so it is when," Tracey said. "I worry all the time.

I worry she's going to have that mammogram and it's going to come back positive, and we'll both have to go through it all again." A new breast cancer study involving twins will aim to uncover the factors potentially playing a role in increasing the risk of the disease. Led by University of Melbourne epidemiologist John Hopper, the study is aiming to understand the impact of genetics and lifestyle in identical twin sisters.

"Twins allow you to get an insight into both genetic and non-genetic factors," Prof Hopper told AAP. "Genetic factors, because there are (identical an.