Werner-Lin Allison, Young Jennifer L, Wilsnack Catherine, Merrill Shana L, Groner Victoria, Greene Mark H, Khincha Payal P
School of Social Policy and Practice, University of Pennsylvania, 3701 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford, CA, USA.
Fam Cancer. 2020 Jul;19(3):259-268. doi: 10.1007/s10689-020-00173-6.
Li-Fraumeni Syndrome (LFS) is characterized by risk of multiple primary malignancies in diverse sites, pediatric onset, near complete penetrance by age 70 years, limited options for prevention, and substantial uncertainty regarding disease manifestation and prognosis. Forty-five families, including 117 individuals aged 13-81 years, enrolled in the US National Cancer Institute's Li-Fraumeni Syndrome Study completed 66 interviews regarding their LFS experiences. An interdisciplinary team used modified grounded theory to examine family distress regarding expectations of loss and change due to likely cancer diagnoses, and the consequences of this likelihood across physical, social, and emotional domains. Disease-free periods were characterized by fearful anticipation of diagnosis or recurrence, uncertainty regarding post-treatment quality of life, and planning for shifts in family dynamics to enable caregiving. The chronicity of waiting for these changes incited dread and inhibited effective coping with the pragmatic, emotional, and existential challenges of the syndrome. Consequently, families reported high burden on roles and resources and limited guidance to prepare for, or achieve resolution with, grief. Anticipatory loss, the experience of bereavement prior to an expected change, distinguishes hereditary cancer risk from a sporadic diagnosis. Such grief is often incomplete in impact or meaning, subjected to rapid or profound change as conditions worsen, and poorly understood. In this study, losses were compounded by profound uncertainty, a chronic feature of LFS, which compromised mourning. Long-term engagement of mental health providers with bereavement training, in partnership with genetics providers, can provide invaluable educational and psychological support to families as they navigate these implacable challenges.
李-弗劳梅尼综合征(LFS)的特征包括患多种不同部位原发性恶性肿瘤的风险、发病于儿童期、到70岁时几乎完全发病、预防手段有限,以及疾病表现和预后存在很大不确定性。45个家庭,包括117名年龄在13至81岁之间的个体,参与了美国国立癌症研究所的李-弗劳梅尼综合征研究,完成了66次关于他们LFS经历的访谈。一个跨学科团队采用改良的扎根理论,研究了家庭因可能的癌症诊断而对损失和变化的预期所产生的困扰,以及这种可能性在身体、社会和情感领域的后果。无病期的特点是对诊断或复发的恐惧预期、对治疗后生活质量的不确定性,以及为家庭动态变化做准备以实现护理。等待这些变化的长期性引发了恐惧,并抑制了对该综合征在实际、情感和生存方面挑战的有效应对。因此,家庭报告了角色和资源方面的高负担,以及为悲伤做准备或解决悲伤的指导有限。预期性损失,即在预期变化之前的丧亲经历,将遗传性癌症风险与散发性诊断区分开来。这种悲伤在影响或意义上往往不完整,会随着情况恶化而迅速或深刻地变化,且理解不足。在本研究中,损失因深刻的不确定性而加剧,这是LFS的一个长期特征,损害了哀悼过程。心理健康提供者长期参与丧亲培训,并与遗传学提供者合作,可以在家庭应对这些严峻挑战时提供宝贵的教育和心理支持。