The genetic variants are specifically linked to the most common form of breast cancer, oestrogen receptor positive, researchers said.
Scientists believe screening women for all the genetic variants so far identified could eventually pick out those at highest risk of breast cancer and improve strategies for preventing the disease.
The study led by scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, analysed the DNA of around 86,000 women of European, 12,000 of Asian and 2,000 of African ancestries, around half of whom had breast cancer.
The research involved scientists from more than 130 institutions worldwide - including the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and the University of Cambridge.
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Researchers were looking for one-letter differences in DNA code that were more likely to be found in women with breast cancer than those without the disease, using a state-of-the-art genetic technique called 'fine mapping'.
They focused on a recently identified hotspot for genetic causes of breast cancer on chromosome 9.
The increases in risk were slightly higher - 14 per cent and 11 per cent respectively - for oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer, but there was no association with oestrogen receptor negative forms of the disease.
The genetic variants are thought to help control the activity of KLF4, despite lying a long distance away from that gene.
Both were associated with increased risk in European women but only one of them, rs10816625, in women of Asian ancestry.
"The more genetic risk factors for breast cancer we discover, of which there are currently more than 80, the more accurately we will be able predict who is at risk of getting the disease. Ultimately this will be vital for designing preventative strategies against breast cancer," Orr said.