Perception of screening and risk reduction surgeries in patients tested for a BRCA deleterious mutation

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Abstract

Background: Women at a high risk for breast cancer are offered choices for screening or prophylactic surgeries. The aim of this study was to evaluate opinions regarding screening and surgical strategies in high-risk women. Methods: Women at the authors' institution who received BRCA1 of 2 testing before July 2005 were sent a follow-up patient survey. The authors compared responses of women who tested positive for a deleterious mutation with those who tested negative. For those who expressed an opinion (agree vs disagree), a 2-sided Fisher exact test was used to compare responses. Results: A total of 540 surveys were sent, and 312 were returned (58%). Of these, 217 had breast cancer, and 86 women tested positive for a mutation. No BRCA+ women felt mammograms were difficult to get because of discomfort, whereas 5.4% of the BRCA- group did (P =.039). Seventy percent of BRCA+ women agreed that prophylactic mastectomy (PM) is the most effective means for reducing risk, compared with 40% of BRCA- women (P

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APA

Litton, J. K., Westin, S. N., Ready, K., Sun, C. C., Peterson, S. K., Meric-Bernstam, F., … Arun, B. K. (2009). Perception of screening and risk reduction surgeries in patients tested for a BRCA deleterious mutation. Cancer, 115(8), 1598–1604. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.24199

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