Inherited mutations in the BRCA1 gene are known to confer a predisposition to breast and ovarian cancer. We have first characterized 19 sequence variants in the BRCA1 gene during mutation screening by direct sequencing using DNA samples from breast/ovarian cancer patients or obligate carriers. The frequencies of these sequence variants were then compared with those found in control populations of women. Among the 10 sequence variants showing an estimated frequency of the less common allele above 0.05, Q/R356, L/P871, E/G1038, K/R1183 and S/G1613 result in a change of amino acids, 2201C/T, 2430T/C and 4427C/T are silent mutations and the two others, 4209-141C/A and 5272 + 66A/G, are intronic polymorphisms. These frequent polymorphisms, with the exception of Q/R356, were in complete or significant pairwise linkage disequilibrium as evaluated in our control populations. With one exception (L/P871), none of these variants had statistically significant (P < 0.05) differences in allele frequency between breast/ovarian cancer patients or obligate carriers and our control populations. Four rare sequence variants designated 710C-->T, D693N, R841W and S1040N were found in both unaffected and breast/ovarian cancer populations, while the missense mutations M1008I, E1219D, R1347G, T1561I and M1628V were detected only once in our patient population. When a functional test is available, it will be important to determine the consequence on the BRCA1 activity of these rare sequence variants and missense mutations.