Primary care providers' willingness to recommend BRCA1/2 testing to adolescents

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Abstract

Clinical practice guidelines discourage pediatric genetic testing for BRCA1/2 mutations due to a lack of timely medical benefit and psychosocial risk. Yet, some high risk families approach primary care providers (PCPs) about testing adolescents, and little is known about PCPs attitudes regarding these requests. We assessed recommendations for testing to a composite patient (a healthy 13-year-old female, mother is a BRCA mutation carrier) among 161 adolescent and family PCPs attending a national medical conference. Testing recommendations were measured with a multidimensional scale that assessed perspectives on informed consent, genetic counseling, and insurance coverage. PCPs expressed moderate willingness to recommend testing; surprisingly, 31% recommended adolescent testing "unconditionally." In multivariable regression modeling, recommendation was positively associated with higher clinical practice volume (P < .05) and greater frequency of ordering other pediatric genetic tests (P

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O’Neill, S. C., Peshkin, B. N., Luta, G., Abraham, A., Walker, L. R., & Tercyak, K. P. (2010). Primary care providers’ willingness to recommend BRCA1/2 testing to adolescents. Familial Cancer, 9(1), 43–50. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10689-009-9243-y

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