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When knowledge of a heritable gene mutation comes out of the blue: treatment-focused genetic testing in women newly diagnosed with breast cancer

Selection of women for treatment-focused genetic testing (TFGT) following a new diagnosis of breast cancer is changing. Increasingly a patient's age and tumour characteristics rather than only their family history are driving access to TFGT, but little is known about the impact of receiving car...

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Published in:European journal of human genetics : EJHG 2016-11, Vol.24 (11), p.1517-1523
Main Authors: Meiser, B, Quinn, V F, Gleeson, M, Kirk, J, Tucker, K M, Rahman, B, Saunders, C, Watts, K J, Peate, M, Geelhoed, E, Barlow-Stewart, K, Field, M, Harris, M, Antill, Y C, Mitchell, G
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Quinn, V F
Gleeson, M
Kirk, J
Tucker, K M
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Barlow-Stewart, K
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description Selection of women for treatment-focused genetic testing (TFGT) following a new diagnosis of breast cancer is changing. Increasingly a patient's age and tumour characteristics rather than only their family history are driving access to TFGT, but little is known about the impact of receiving carrier-positive results in individuals with no family history of cancer. This study assesses the role of knowledge of a family history of cancer on psychosocial adjustment to TFGT in both women with and without mutation carrier-positive results. In-depth semistructured interviews were conducted with 20 women who had undergone TFGT, and who had been purposively sampled to represent women both family history and carrier status, and subjected to a rigorous qualitative analysis. It was found that mutation carriers without a family history reported difficulties in making surgical decisions quickly, while in carriers with a family history, a decision regarding surgery, electing for bilateral mastectomy (BM), had often already been made before receipt of their result. Long-term adjustment to a mutation-positive result was hindered by a sense of isolation not only by those without a family history but also those with a family history who lacked an affected relative with whom they could identify. Women with a family history who had no mutation identified and who had not elected BM reported a lack of closure following TFGT. These findings indicate support deficits hindering adjustment to positive TFGT results for women with and without a family history, particularly in regard to immediate decision-making about risk-reducing surgery.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/ejhg.2016.69
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subjects Adult
BRCA1 Protein - genetics
BRCA2 Protein - genetics
Breast cancer
Breast Neoplasms - diagnosis
Breast Neoplasms - genetics
Breast Neoplasms - psychology
Decision making
Family medical history
Female
Genetic screening
Genetic Testing
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health risk assessment
Heterozygote
Humans
Mastectomy
Middle Aged
Mutation
Ovarian cancer
Point mutation
Surgery
Surveys and Questionnaires
Truth Disclosure
Tumors
Womens health
title When knowledge of a heritable gene mutation comes out of the blue: treatment-focused genetic testing in women newly diagnosed with breast cancer
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