TY - JOUR
T1 - Cancer risk management strategies and perceptions of unaffected women 5 years after predictive genetic testing for BRCA1/2 mutations
AU - Julian-Reynier, Claire
AU - Mancini, Julien
AU - Mouret-Fourme, Emmanuelle
AU - Gauthier-Villars, Marion
AU - Bonadona, Valérie
AU - Berthet, Pascaline
AU - Fricker, Jean Pierre
AU - Caron, Olivier
AU - Luporsi, Elisabeth
AU - Noguès, Catherine
N1 - Funding Information:
All the members of the Genepso cohort investigators including, Claude Adenis, Yves-Jean Bignon, Annie Chevrier, Agnès Chompret, Odile Cohen-Haguenauer, Isabelle Coupier, Liliane Demange, Capucine Delnatte, Hélène Dreyfus, Catherine Dugast, Franc¸ois Eisinger, Laurence Faivre, Marc Frenay, Paul Gesta, Laurence Gladieff, Christine Lasset, Michel Longy, Tan Dat NGuyen, Claude Picard, Irwin Piot, Hagay Sobol, Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet, Laurence Venat-Bouvet, Philippe Vennin, Hélène Zattara-Cannoni. Roxane Fabre and Anne-Deborah Bouhnik are acknowledged for their statistical expertise. This work was supported by grant from the ‘Institut National du Cancer’ (National Cancer Institute) R08097AA/RPT08011AAA INCA.
PY - 2011/5/1
Y1 - 2011/5/1
N2 - In a French national cohort of unaffected females carriers/non-carriers of a BRCA1/2 mutation, long-term preventive strategies and breast/ovarian cancer risk perceptions were followed up to 5 years after test result disclosure, using self-administered questionnaires. Response rate was 74%. Carriers (N=101) were younger (average age±SD=37±10) than non-carriers (N=145; 42±12). There were four management strategies that comprised 88% of the decisions made by the unaffected carriers: 50% opted for breast surveillance alone, based on either magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and other imaging (31%) or mammography alone (19%); 38% opted for either risk reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) and breast surveillance, based on MRI and other imaging (28%) or mammography alone (10%). The other three strategies were: risk reducing mastectomy (RRM) and RRSO (5%), RRM alone (2%) and neither RRM/RRSO nor surveillance (6%). The results obtained for various age groups are presented here. Non-carriers often opted for screening despite their low cancer risk. Result disclosure increased carriers' short-term high breast/ovarian cancer risk perceptions (P≤0.02) and decreased non-carriers' short- and long-term perceptions (P<0.001). During follow-up, high breast cancer risk perceptions increased with time among those who had no RRM and decreased in the opposite case; high ovarian cancer risk perceptions increased further with time among those who had no RRSO and decreased in the opposite case; RRSO did not affect breast cancer risk perceptions. Informed decision-making involves letting women know whether opting for RRSO and breast MRI surveillance is as effective in terms of survival as RRM and RRSO.
AB - In a French national cohort of unaffected females carriers/non-carriers of a BRCA1/2 mutation, long-term preventive strategies and breast/ovarian cancer risk perceptions were followed up to 5 years after test result disclosure, using self-administered questionnaires. Response rate was 74%. Carriers (N=101) were younger (average age±SD=37±10) than non-carriers (N=145; 42±12). There were four management strategies that comprised 88% of the decisions made by the unaffected carriers: 50% opted for breast surveillance alone, based on either magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and other imaging (31%) or mammography alone (19%); 38% opted for either risk reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) and breast surveillance, based on MRI and other imaging (28%) or mammography alone (10%). The other three strategies were: risk reducing mastectomy (RRM) and RRSO (5%), RRM alone (2%) and neither RRM/RRSO nor surveillance (6%). The results obtained for various age groups are presented here. Non-carriers often opted for screening despite their low cancer risk. Result disclosure increased carriers' short-term high breast/ovarian cancer risk perceptions (P≤0.02) and decreased non-carriers' short- and long-term perceptions (P<0.001). During follow-up, high breast cancer risk perceptions increased with time among those who had no RRM and decreased in the opposite case; high ovarian cancer risk perceptions increased further with time among those who had no RRSO and decreased in the opposite case; RRSO did not affect breast cancer risk perceptions. Informed decision-making involves letting women know whether opting for RRSO and breast MRI surveillance is as effective in terms of survival as RRM and RRSO.
KW - BRCA1/2 genetic testing
KW - Breast/ovarian cancer
KW - Preventive management
KW - Risk perception
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79955765502&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/ejhg.2010.241
DO - 10.1038/ejhg.2010.241
M3 - Article
C2 - 21267012
AN - SCOPUS:79955765502
SN - 1018-4813
VL - 19
SP - 500
EP - 506
JO - European Journal of Human Genetics
JF - European Journal of Human Genetics
IS - 5
ER -