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Oncologist-led BRCAcounselling improves access to cancer genetic testing in middle-income Asian country, with no significant impact on psychosocial outcomes

Authors :
Yoon, Sook-Yee
Wong, Siu Wan
Lim, Joanna
Ahmad, Syuhada
Mariapun, Shivaani
Padmanabhan, Heamanthaa
Hassan, Nur Tiara
Lau, Shao Yan
Ch'ng, Gaik-Siew
Haniffa, Muzhirah
Ong, Winnie P
Rethanavelu, Kavitha
Moey, Lip Hen
Keng, Wee Teik
Omar, Jamil
Mohd Abas, Mohd Norazam
Yong, Chee Meng
Ramasamy, Vickneswaren
Md Noor, Mohd Rushdan
Aliyas, Ismail
Lim, Michael C K
Suberamaniam, Anuradha
Mat Adenan, Noor Azmi
Ahmad, Zatul Akmar
Ho, Gwo Fuang
Abdul Malik, Rozita
Subramaniam, Suguna
Khoo, Boom Ping
Raja, Arivendran
Chin, Yeung Sing
Sim, Wee Wee
Teh, Beng Hock
Kho, Swee Kiong
Ong, Eunice S E
Voon, Pei Jye
Ismail, Ghazali
Lee, Chui Ling
Abdullah, Badrul Zaman
Loo, Kwong Sheng
Lim, Chun Sen
Lee, Saw Joo
Lim, Keng Joo Lim
Shafiee, Mohamad Nasir
Ismail, Fuad
Latiff, Zarina Abdul
Ismail, Mohd Pazudin
Mohamed Jamli, Mohamad Faiz
Kumarasamy, Suresh
Leong, Kin Wah
Low, John
Md Yusof, Mastura
Ahmad Mustafa, Ahmad Muzamir
Mat Ali, Nor Huda
Makanjang, Mary
Tayib, Shahila
Cheah, Nellie
Lim, Boon Kiong
Fong, Chee Kin
Foo, Yoke Ching
Mellor Abdullah, Matin
Tan, Teck Sin
Chow, Doris S Y
Ho, Kean Fatt
Raman, Rakesh
Radzi, Ahmad
Deniel, Azura
Teoh, Daren C Y
Ang, Soo Fan
Joseph, Joseph K
Ng, Paul Hock Oon
Tho, Lye-Mun
Ahmad, Azura Rozila
Muin, Ileena
Bleiker, Eveline
George, Angela
Thong, Meow-Keong
Woo, Yin Ling
Teo, Soo Hwang
Source :
Journal of Medical Genetics (JMG); 2022, Vol. 59 Issue: 3 p220-229, 10p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundIdentifying patients with BRCAmutations is clinically important to inform on the potential response to treatment and for risk management of patients and their relatives. However, traditional referral routes may not meet clinical needs, and therefore, mainstreaming cancer genetics has been shown to be effective in some high-income and high health-literacy settings. To date, no study has reported on the feasibility of mainstreaming in low-income and middle-income settings, where the service considerations and health literacy could detrimentally affect the feasibility of mainstreaming.MethodsThe Mainstreaming Genetic Counselling for Ovarian Cancer Patients (MaGiC) study is a prospective, two-arm observational study comparing oncologist-led and genetics-led counselling. This study included 790 multiethnic patients with ovarian cancer from 23 sites in Malaysia. We compared the impact of different method of delivery of genetic counselling on the uptake of genetic testing and assessed the feasibility, knowledge and satisfaction of patients with ovarian cancer.ResultsOncologists were satisfied with the mainstreaming experience, with 95% indicating a desire to incorporate testing into their clinical practice. The uptake of genetic testing was similar in the mainstreaming and genetics arm (80% and 79%, respectively). Patient satisfaction was high, whereas decision conflict and psychological impact were low in both arms of the study. Notably, decisional conflict, although lower than threshold, was higher for the mainstreaming group compared with the genetics arm. Overall, 13.5% of patients had a pathogenic variant in BRCA1or BRCA2,and there was no difference between psychosocial measures for carriers in both arms.ConclusionThe MaGiC study demonstrates that mainstreaming cancer genetics is feasible in low-resource and middle-resource Asian setting and increased coverage for genetic testing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222593 and 14686244
Volume :
59
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Medical Genetics (JMG)
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58955893
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2020-107416