Hello Leonard,
I've never heard of a correlation between her2 and brca but of course maybe no one else has asked this question yet. The one thing I do know is that women with the mutation tend to develop cancer quite young...I don't know if this was true of your late wife.
That said, you might first continue to gather information before presenting any of this to your daughters. For instance, YOU could make an appointment for yourself with a genetic counselor at a cancer center and they can run your family's medical history (not just your late wife's but yours too: the mutation can be passed down through fathers as well--especially those who have Ashkenazic Jewish heritage) and run a program that would at least tell you what your daughters' likelihood is of having inherited the gene mutation.
That said, my partner Rachel did just this, came out with a VERY high probability of having the mutation, and then did the blood test only to find out she doesn't have it. As she said at that time, this just means she has some other mutation they haven't found yet.
In any event, I'm so sorry for your loss and so sorry you still face these hard questions.
Good luck.
Jeff
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