Genetic abnormalities in BRCA1 and BRCA2 predispose to hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC). However, only approximately 25% of HBOC cases can be ascribed to BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations.Next-generation sequencing approaches are uncovering novel HBOC factors among affected families without BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations; at present more than 25 have emerged. New factors generally function in the same genome maintenance pathways as established HBOC factors, indicating substantial locus heterogeneity.Disabled pathways in HBOC are homologous recombination repair (HRR), protection of stalling DNA replication forks, mismatch repair, and cell cycle checkpoint and DNA damage checkpoint control pathways.The new pathogenic variants are rare, which poses challenges to the estimation of risk attribution through patient cohorts. There is a risk that patients or healthy carriers exhibiting pathogenic variants in rare HBOC genes may be excluded from the best possible treatment or presymptomatic screening programmes.Structural and functional analysis can support variant classification in the context of international collaboration and standardized guidelines. Functional approaches are aided by extensive locus heterogeneity, which converges on a relatively small number of genome maintenance pathways that may be reconciled in vitro.