'Cancer doesn't have an age': genetic testing and cancer risk management in BRCA1/2 mutation-positive women aged 18-24.

Health (London, England : 1997) Pub Date : 2012-11-01 Epub Date: 2012-04-30 DOI:10.1177/1363459312442420
Allison Werner-Lin, Lindsey M Hoskins, Maya H Doyle, Mark H Greene
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引用次数: 45

Abstract

Increasingly, 18-24-year-old women from hereditary breast/ovarian cancer (HBOC) families are pursuing genetic testing, despite their low absolute risks of breast and ovarian cancer and the fact that evidence-based management options used with older high-risk women are not generally available. Difficult clinical decisions in older carriers take on substantially more complexity and value-laden import in very young carriers. As a result, many of the latter receive highly personal and emotionally charged cancer risk information in a life context where management strategies are not well defined. We analyzed 32 in-depth interviews with BRCA1/2 mutation-positive women aged 18-24 using techniques of grounded theory and interpretive description. Participants described feeling vulnerable to a cancer diagnosis but in a quandary regarding their care because evidence-based approaches to management have not been developed and clinical trials have not been undertaken. Our participants demonstrated a wide range of genetic and health literacy. Inconsistent recommendations, surveillance fatigue, and the unpredictability of their having health insurance coverage for surgical risk-reducing procedures led several to contemplate risk-reducing mastectomy before age 25. Parents remained a primary source of emotional and financial support, slowing age-appropriate independence and complicating patient privacy. Our findings suggest that, for 18-24-year-olds, readiness to autonomously elect genetic testing, to fully understand and act on genetic information, and to confidently make decisions with life-long implications are all evolving processes. We comment on the tensions between informed consent, privacy, and the unique developmental needs of BRCA1/2 mutation-positive women just emerging into their adult years.

“癌症没有年龄”:18-24岁BRCA1/2突变阳性女性的基因检测和癌症风险管理。
越来越多来自遗传性乳腺癌/卵巢癌(HBOC)家族的18-24岁女性正在进行基因检测,尽管她们患乳腺癌和卵巢癌的绝对风险较低,而且通常无法获得用于老年高危女性的循证管理方案。老年携带者的困难临床决策在非常年轻的携带者中具有更大的复杂性和价值负担。因此,在管理策略不明确的生活环境中,后者中的许多人接受了高度个人化和情绪化的癌症风险信息。我们使用扎根理论和解释性描述技术分析了32位18-24岁BRCA1/2突变阳性女性的深度访谈。参与者描述说,他们对癌症诊断感到很脆弱,但由于没有开发出基于证据的管理方法,也没有进行临床试验,他们对自己的护理感到困惑。我们的参与者展示了广泛的遗传和健康知识。不一致的建议,监测疲劳,以及他们的医疗保险覆盖手术风险降低程序的不可预测性导致一些人在25岁之前考虑降低风险的乳房切除术。父母仍然是情感和经济支持的主要来源,减缓了与年龄相适应的独立性,并使患者隐私复杂化。我们的研究结果表明,对于18-24岁的人来说,自主选择基因检测、充分理解并根据基因信息采取行动、自信地做出终身影响的决定都是一个不断发展的过程。我们评论了知情同意、隐私和BRCA1/2突变阳性女性刚刚进入成年期的独特发展需求之间的紧张关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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