Yanes Tatiane, Meiser Bettina, Young Mary-Anne, Kaur Rajneesh, Mitchell Gillian, Barlow-Stewart Kristine, Roscioli Tony, Halliday Jane, James Paul
Prince of Wales Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
School of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
BMC Cancer. 2017 Jul 18;17(1):491. doi: 10.1186/s12885-017-3485-0.
The 'common variant, common disease' model predicts that a significant component of hereditary breast cancer unexplained by pathogenic variants in moderate or high-penetrance genes is due to the cumulative effect of common risk variants in DNA (polygenic risk). Assessing a woman's breast cancer risk by testing for common risk variants can provide useful information for women who would otherwise receive uninformative results by traditional monogenic testing. Despite increasing support for the utility of common risk variants in hereditary breast cancer, research findings have not yet been integrated into clinical practice. Translational research is therefore critical to ensure results are effectively communicated, and that women do not experience undue adverse psychological outcomes.
In this prospective study, 400 women with a personal and/or high risk family history of breast cancer will be recruited from six familial cancer centers (FCCs) in Australia. Eligible women will be invited to attend a FCC and receive their personal polygenic risk result for breast cancer. Genetic health professionals participating in the study will receive training on the return of polygenic risk information and a training manual and visual aids will be developed to facilitate patient communication. Participants will complete up to three self-administered questionnaires over a 12-months period to assess the short-and long-term psychological and behavioral outcomes of receiving or not receiving their personal polygenic risk result.
This is the world's first study to assess the psychological and behavioral impact of offering polygenic risk information to women from families at high risk of breast cancer. Findings from this research will provide the basis for the development of a new service model to provide polygenic risk information in familial cancer clinics.
The study was retrospectively registered on 27th April 2017 with the Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Group (Registration no: ACTRN12617000594325; clinical trial URL: https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=372743 ).
“常见变异,常见疾病”模型预测,中度或高度外显率基因中的致病变异无法解释的遗传性乳腺癌的一个重要组成部分,是由于DNA中常见风险变异的累积效应(多基因风险)。通过检测常见风险变异来评估女性患乳腺癌的风险,可为那些通过传统单基因检测会得到无信息结果的女性提供有用信息。尽管越来越多的人支持常见风险变异在遗传性乳腺癌中的作用,但研究结果尚未整合到临床实践中。因此,转化研究对于确保结果得到有效传达以及女性不会经历不必要的不良心理后果至关重要。
在这项前瞻性研究中,将从澳大利亚的六个家族性癌症中心(FCC)招募400名有个人和/或乳腺癌高风险家族史的女性。符合条件的女性将被邀请到FCC,并获得她们个人的乳腺癌多基因风险结果。参与研究的遗传健康专业人员将接受关于多基因风险信息反馈的培训,并将编写培训手册和制作视觉辅助工具以促进与患者的沟通。参与者将在12个月内完成多达三份自我管理的问卷,以评估接受或不接受个人多基因风险结果的短期和长期心理及行为结果。
这是世界上第一项评估向乳腺癌高风险家族的女性提供多基因风险信息的心理和行为影响的研究。这项研究的结果将为在家族性癌症诊所提供多基因风险信息的新服务模式的开发提供基础。
该研究于2017年4月27日在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验组进行了回顾性注册(注册号:ACTRN12617000594325;临床试验网址:https://www.anzctr.org.au/Trial/Registration/TrialReview.aspx?id=372743 )。