Publication | Closed Access
The influence of psychological distress on use of genetic testing for cancer risk.
178
Citations
26
References
1997
Year
CounselingGenetic TestingBrca1 Test UseGenetic EpidemiologyBrca1 GeneMental HealthCancer EducationPsychologyReproductive Genetic CounselingPublic HealthPsychological DistressPsychiatryDepressionCancer DiagnosisBrca1 Test ResultsCancer RiskGenetic CounselingBreast CancerMedicinePublic Health Genetics
The recent identification of BRCA1, a breast cancer susceptibility gene, offers an unprecedented opportunity for high-risk individuals to learn whether they are genetically predisposed to develop breast or ovarian cancer. This study examined the relationships between psychological distress and use of BRCA1 testing by 149 high-risk individuals from hereditary cancer families. After a baseline assessment of demographics, objective risk, cancer-specific distress, and global distress (depressive symptoms), study participants were offered the opportunity to receive genetic counseling and to learn whether they carry a mutation in the BRCA1 gene. Overall, 58% of study participants requested BRCA1 test results, and 42% declined to learn their genetic status. After controlling for demographic factors and risk status, cancer-specific distress was significantly and positively related to BRCA1 test use, whereas global distress was unrelated to test use.
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