Bakos Alexis D, Hutson Sadie P, Loud Jennifer T, Peters June A, Giusti Ruthann M, Greene Mark H
Department of Health and Human Services, National Institute of Nursing Research, NIH, Rockville, MD, USA.
Health Expect. 2008 Sep;11(3):220-31. doi: 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2008.00494.x.
When women from families with a known BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation test negative for the family mutation, it is assumed that they will transition their personal cancer risk perception from high to average risk. However, there are scant data regarding the experience of mutation-negative women after genetic testing disclosure, particularly related to the shift of risk perception from assumed mutation-positive to actual mutation-negative. This study was designed to explore cancer risk perception and the experience of being a mutation-negative woman within a known BRCA1/2 mutation-positive family.
We employed a qualitative descriptive design and convened a sample of 13 women who contributed in-depth, semi-structured telephone interviews (audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim) and performed qualitative content analysis with NVivo 2.0 software.
Six major content areas emerged from interview data: (i) rationale for initial involvement in the breast imaging study, (ii) rationale for continued participation, (iii) experience of living in a multiple-case family, (iv) risk perception: the personal meaning of mutation-negative status, (v) opinions regarding cancer aetiology and (vi) communication patterns between mutation-negative and mutation-positive family members.
Living in a hereditary breast and ovarian cancer family is a complex experience that affects cognitive, emotional and social functioning. Our findings indicate that mutation-negative women may have unmet psychosocial needs that must be addressed by health-care professionals, particularly in the primary-care setting following genetic disclosure of a potentially reassuring result regarding their lack of the very high cancer risks associated with BRCA1/2 mutations.
当来自已知携带BRCA1或BRCA2基因突变家族的女性检测出家族突变呈阴性时,人们认为她们会将个人癌症风险认知从高风险转变为平均风险。然而,关于基因检测结果披露后突变阴性女性的经历的数据很少,特别是与风险认知从假定的突变阳性转变为实际的突变阴性有关的数据。本研究旨在探讨已知BRCA1/2突变阳性家族中癌症风险认知以及突变阴性女性的经历。
我们采用定性描述性设计,召集了13名女性样本,她们参与了深入的半结构化电话访谈(进行录音并逐字转录),并使用NVivo 2.0软件进行定性内容分析。
访谈数据出现了六个主要内容领域:(i)最初参与乳房成像研究的理由,(ii)继续参与的理由,(iii)生活在多病例家族中的经历,(iv)风险认知:突变阴性状态的个人意义,(v)对癌症病因的看法,以及(vi)突变阴性和突变阳性家族成员之间的沟通模式。
生活在遗传性乳腺癌和卵巢癌家族中是一种复杂的经历,会影响认知、情感和社会功能。我们的研究结果表明,突变阴性女性可能有未得到满足的心理社会需求,医疗保健专业人员必须予以关注,特别是在基因检测披露其缺乏与BRCA1/2突变相关的极高癌症风险这一可能令人安心的结果之后的初级保健环境中。