“I wish that there was more info”: characterizing the uncertainty experienced by carriers of pathogenic ATM and/or CHEK2 variants

被引:0
|
作者
Kathryn G. Reyes
Cheyla Clark
Meredith Gerhart
Ainsley J. Newson
Kelly E. Ormond
机构
[1] Stanford University School of Medicine,Department of Genetics
[2] Stanford Health Care,Cancer Genetics and Genomics
[3] University of Sydney,Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney Health Ethics
[4] Stanford University School of Medicine,Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics
来源
Familial Cancer | 2022年 / 21卷
关键词
Uncertainty; Cancer genetics; Genetic testing; Qualitative research;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Little is known about what uncertainties patients experience after being identified to carry a pathogenic variant in a moderate-risk cancer gene as a result of undergoing multigene panel testing for cancer susceptibility. Data regarding cancer risk estimates and effectiveness of risk management strategies for these variants continues to evolve, which has the potential to evoke uncertainty. Acknowledging uncertainty during pre- and post-test discussions is imperative to helping individuals to adapt to their results. A better understanding of this population’s experience of uncertainty is needed to facilitate such discussions and is the aim of the current study. Semi-structured interviews (30–60 min in length), informed by Han and colleagues’ taxonomy of uncertainty in clinical genomic sequencing, were conducted to assess motivations to pursue genetic testing, areas of perceived uncertainty, and strategies for managing uncertainty among 20 carriers of pathogenic variants in two moderate-risk genes, ATM and CHEK2. We found that participants pursue genetic testing with the expectation that results will clarify cancer risks and approaches to management. Participants experience uncertainties aligning with Han’s taxonomy relating to the ambiguity of specific cancer risk estimates and effectiveness of certain risk management strategies. These uncertainties influenced decisions around the uptake of risk management strategies, which were additionally impacted by clinicians’ uncertainty towards such strategies. Participants employ a variety of uncertainty management approaches to cope with their anxieties. Clinicians may wish to use these findings to facilitate patient adaptation to the implications of multigene panel testing for cancer susceptibility during both pre- and post-test counseling sessions.
引用
收藏
页码:143 / 155
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Double CHEK2 Pathogenic and Low-Risk Variants and Associated Cancer Phenotypes
    Bychkovsky, Brittany L.
    Agaoglu, Nihat B.
    Horton, Carolyn
    Polfus, Linda
    Richardson, Marcy E.
    Young, Colin
    Scheib, Rochelle
    Garber, Judy E.
    Rana, Huma Q.
    JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2025, 8 (01)
  • [22] Twenty-one gene recurrence scores in individuals with breast cancer associated with CHEK2 and ATM germline pathogenic variants.
    Shah, Payal Deepak
    Brower, Jamie
    Cuff, Lauren
    Richardville, Robert
    Hamilton, Jada G.
    Garber, Judy Ellen
    Yadav, Siddhartha
    Couch, Fergus
    Offit, Kenneth
    Domchek, Susan M.
    Robson, Mark E.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2023, 41 (16)
  • [23] Radiation Treatment, ATM, BRCA1/2, and CHEK2*1100delC Pathogenic Variants and Risk of Contralateral Breast Cancer
    Reiner, Anne S.
    Robson, Mark E.
    Mellemkjaer, Lene
    Tischkowitz, Marc
    John, Esther M.
    Lynch, Charles F.
    Brooks, Jennifer D.
    Boice, John D.
    Knight, Julia A.
    Teraoka, Sharon N.
    Liang, Xiaolin
    Woods, Meghan
    Shen, Ronglai
    Shore, Roy E.
    Stram, Daniel O.
    Thomas, Duncan C.
    Malone, Kathleen E.
    Bernstein, Leslie
    Riaz, Nadeem
    Woodward, Wendy
    Powell, Simon
    Goldgar, David
    Concannon, Patrick
    Bernstein, Jonine L.
    JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 2020, 112 (12): : 1275 - 1278
  • [24] Real-world clinical characteristics and management of breast cancer in patients with germline pathogenic variants in ATM, CHEK2 and PALB2
    Brzeskiewicz, Laura
    Roscow, Breanna
    Beeks, April
    Kunz, Barb
    Ratzel, Sarah
    Slavin, Thomas
    Cummings, Shelly
    Tedesco, Karen
    Reid, Robert
    GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2022, 24 (03) : S34 - S34
  • [25] Far From Checkmate: Gastrointestinal Neoplasia Risk in Patients With Pathogenic Variants in CHEK2
    Sommovilla, Joshua
    Burke, Carol
    Liska, David
    DISEASES OF THE COLON & RECTUM, 2024, 67 (10) : 1225 - 1226
  • [26] Beyond CHEK2 in breast cancer: Search for additional moderately penetrant risk gene variants by analyzing the oligogenic disease course in CHEK2 mutation carriers
    Pohl, E.
    Borde, J.
    Hauke, J.
    Schmidt, S.
    Weber-Lassalle, K.
    Ernst, C.
    Niederacher, D.
    Arnold, N.
    Hellebrand, H.
    Meindl, A.
    Gehrig, A.
    Schmidt, G.
    Dutrannoy, V.
    Kast, K.
    Hahnen, E.
    Schmutzler, R.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2018, 26 : 535 - 536
  • [27] PALB2, CHEK2 and ATM rare variants and cancer risk: data from COGS
    Southey, Melissa C.
    Goldgar, David E.
    Winqvist, Robert
    Pylkas, Katri
    Couch, Fergus
    Tischkowitz, Marc
    Foulkes, William D.
    Dennis, Joe
    Michailidou, Kyriaki
    van Rensburg, Elizabeth J.
    Heikkinen, Tuomas
    Nevanlinna, Heli
    Hopper, John L.
    Doerk, Thilo
    Claes, Kathleen B. M.
    Reis-Filho, Jorge
    Teo, Zhi Ling
    Radice, Paolo
    Catucci, Irene
    Peterlongo, Paolo
    Tsimiklis, Helen
    Odefrey, Fabrice A.
    Dowty, James G.
    Schmidt, Marjanka K.
    Broeks, Annegien
    Hogervorst, Frans B.
    Verhoef, Senno
    Carpenter, Jane
    Clarke, Christine
    Scott, Rodney J.
    Fasching, Peter A.
    Haeberle, Lothar
    Ekici, Arif B.
    Beckmann, Matthias W.
    Peto, Julian
    dos-Santos-Silva, Isabel
    Fletcher, Olivia
    Johnson, Nichola
    Bolla, Manjeet K.
    Sawyer, Elinor J.
    Tomlinson, Ian
    Kerin, Michael J.
    Miller, Nicola
    Marme, Federik
    Burwinkel, Barbara
    Yang, Rongxi
    Guenel, Pascal
    Therese Truong
    Menegaux, Florence
    Sanchez, Marie
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS, 2016, 53 (12) : 800 - 811
  • [28] Population-based Estimates of contralateral Breast Cancer Risk among Carriers of Germline Pathogenic Variants in ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2, and PALB2
    Yadav, Siddhartha
    Boddicker, Nicholas J.
    Na, Jie
    Polley, Eric C.
    Hu, Chunling
    Hart, Steven N.
    Gnanaolivu, Rohan D.
    Larson, Nicole
    Dunn, Carolyn
    Holtegaard, Susan
    Huang, Huaizhi
    Teras, Lauren R.
    Patel, Alpa V.
    Lacey, James V., Jr.
    Neuhausen, Susan
    Bernstein, Leslie
    Martinez, Elena
    Haiman, Christopher
    Chen, Fei
    Ruddy, Kathryn
    Olson, Janet
    John, Esther
    Kurian, Allison W.
    Sandler, Dale P.
    O'Brien, Katie M.
    Taylor, Jack A.
    Weinberg, Clarice R.
    Anton-Culver, Hoda
    Ziogas, Argyrios
    Zirpoli, Gary R.
    Goldgar, David E.
    Nathanson, Katherine L.
    Domchek, Susan
    Palmer, Julie R.
    Weitzel, Jeffrey
    Kraft, Peter
    Couch, Fergus J.
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2023, 83 (05)
  • [29] Beyond CHEK2 in breast cancer: Search for additional moderately penetrant risk gene variants by analyzing the oligogenic disease course in CHEK2 mutation carriers
    Pohl, E.
    Richters, L.
    Hauke, J.
    Ernst, C.
    Krober, S.
    Niederacher, D.
    Arnold, N.
    Ramser, J.
    Gross, E.
    Gehrig, A.
    Schmidt, G.
    Dutrannoy, V.
    Kast, K.
    Hahnen, E.
    Schmutzler, R.
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2017, 77
  • [30] Increased prevalence of pathogenic and likely pathogenic CHEK2 variants in the Balearic Islands Hereditary Cancer cohorts.
    Antonia Caro-Miro, Maria
    Llado-Sampol, Catalina
    Perello-Martorell, Antonia
    Horvath, Evelin
    de la Torre-Rubio, Paloma
    Heine Suner, Damian
    Asensio-Landa, Victor
    Torres-Juan, Laura
    Carmen Prado-Farnos, Maria
    Renee Avella-Klaassen, Susana
    Martinez, Iciar
    Alarcon Company, Jesus
    Obrador-Hevia, Antonia
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2024, 32 : 1237 - 1238