Hamilton Jada G, Mays Darren, DeMarco Tiffani, Tercyak Kenneth P
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Oncology, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Fam Cancer. 2016 Oct;15(4):513-22. doi: 10.1007/s10689-016-9876-6.
Genetic testing for BRCA genes, associated with hereditary breast-ovarian cancer risk, is an accepted cancer control strategy. BRCA genetic testing has both medical and psychosocial implications for individuals seeking testing and their family members. However, promoting open and adaptive communication about cancer risk in the family is challenging for parents of minor children. Using prospective data collected from mothers undergoing BRCA genetic testing and their untested co-parents (N = 102 parenting dyads), we examined how maternal and co-parent characteristics independently and conjointly influenced the overall quality of parent-child communication with minor children. Statistical associations were tested in accordance with the Actor-Partner Interdependence Model. Significant Actor effects were observed among mothers, such that open parent-child communication prior to genetic testing was positively associated with open communication 6 months following receipt of genetic test results; and among co-parents, more open parent-child communication at baseline and greater perceived quality of the parenting relationship were associated with more open parent-child communication at follow-up. Partner effects were also observed: co-parents' baseline communication and confidence in their ability to communicate with their minor children about genetic testing was positively associated with open maternal parent-child communication at follow-up. These results demonstrate that for families facing the prospect of cancer genetic testing, perceptions and behaviors of both members of child-rearing couples have important implications for the overall quality of communication with their minor children, including communication about cancer risk.
与遗传性乳腺癌-卵巢癌风险相关的BRCA基因检测是一种被认可的癌症控制策略。BRCA基因检测对寻求检测的个人及其家庭成员具有医学和心理社会方面的影响。然而,对于未成年子女的父母来说,促进家庭中关于癌症风险的开放和适应性沟通具有挑战性。利用从接受BRCA基因检测的母亲及其未检测的共同父母(N = 102对育儿二元组)收集的前瞻性数据,我们研究了母亲和共同父母的特征如何独立和共同影响与未成年子女的亲子沟通的整体质量。根据行为者-伙伴相互依赖模型测试统计关联。在母亲中观察到显著的行为者效应,即基因检测前开放的亲子沟通与收到基因检测结果6个月后的开放沟通呈正相关;在共同父母中,基线时更开放的亲子沟通和更高的养育关系感知质量与随访时更开放的亲子沟通相关。还观察到伙伴效应:共同父母的基线沟通以及他们与未成年子女就基因检测进行沟通的能力信心与随访时母亲开放的亲子沟通呈正相关。这些结果表明,对于面临癌症基因检测前景的家庭,育儿夫妇双方的认知和行为对与未成年子女的沟通整体质量具有重要影响,包括关于癌症风险的沟通。