| Literature DB >> 30400647 |
Ranjit Manchanda1,2,3, Faiza Gaba4,5.
Abstract
The current clinical model for genetic testing is based on clinical-criteria/family-history (FH) and a pre-defined mutation probability threshold. It requires people to develop cancer before identifying unaffected individuals in the family to target prevention. This process is inefficient, resource intensive and misses >50% of individuals or mutation carriers at risk. Population genetic-testing can overcome these limitations. It is technically feasible to test populations on a large scale; genetic-testing costs are falling and acceptability and awareness are rising. MEDLINE, EMBASE, Pubmed, CINAHL and PsychINFO databases were searched using free-text and MeSH terms; retrieved reference lists of publications were screened; additionally, web-based platforms, Google, and clinical-trial registries were searched. Quality of studies was evaluated using appropriate check-lists. A number of studies have evaluated population-based BRCA-testing in the Jewish population. This has been found to be acceptable, feasible, clinically-effective, safe, associated with high satisfaction rates and extremely cost-effective. Data support change in guidelines for population-based BRCA-testing in the Jewish population. Population panel testing for BRCA1/BRCA2/RAD51C/RAD51D/BRIP1/PALB2 gene mutations is the most cost-effective genetic-testing strategy in general-population women and can prevent thousands more breast and ovarian cancers than current clinical-criteria based approaches. A few ongoing studies are evaluating population-based genetic-testing for multiple cancer susceptibility genes in the general population but more implementation studies are needed. A future population-testing programme could also target other chronic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA; Jewish; cancer prevention; general population; genetic testing; population testing; primary prevention
Year: 2018 PMID: 30400647 PMCID: PMC6266041 DOI: 10.3390/cancers10110424
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Search strategy for literature search.
| Objective | To Identify Published Literature on Unselected Population Based Germline Testing |
|---|---|
| Data sources | A systematic review of articles with the use of MEDLINE (1946 to August 2018), EMBASE (1974 to August 2018), Pubmed (1996 to August 2018), CINAHL (1937 to August 2018), PsychINFO (1806 to August 2018) |
| Search strategy | 49 searches were undertaken using the below PICO framework: |
| 1 | (LOW RISK).ti,ab |
| 2 | exp “LOW RISK”/ |
| 3 | (POPULATION RISK).ti,ab |
| 4 | exp “POPULATION RISK”/ |
| 5 | 1 OR 2 OR 3 OR 4 |
| 6 | (CANCER).ti,ab |
| 7 | exp “CANCER”/ |
| 8 | 6 OR 7 |
| 9 | (POPULATION GENETIC TESTING).ti,ab |
| 10 | exp “POPULATION GENETIC TESTING”/ |
| 11 | (UNSELECTED GENETIC TESTING).ti,ab |
| 12 | exp “UNSELECTED GENETIC TESTING”/ |
| 13 | 9 OR 10 OR 11 OR 12 |
| 14 | 8 AND 13 |
| 15 | (FAMILY HISTORY).ti,ab |
| 16 | exp “FAMILY HISTORY”/ |
| 17 | 15 OR 16 |
| 18 | (GENETIC TESTING).ti,ab |
| 19 | exp “GENETIC TESTING”/ |
| 20 | 18 OR 19 |
| 21 | 8 AND 17 AND 20 |
| 22 | (BRCA).ti,ab |
| 23 | exp “BRCA”/ |
| 24 | (BRCA AND “1 OR 2”).ti,ab |
| 25 | exp “BRCA AND 1 OR 2”/ |
| 26 | (BRCA AND 1).ti,ab |
| 27 | exp “BRCA AND 1”/ |
| 28 | (BRCA AND 2).ti,ab |
| 29 | exp “BRCA AND 2”/ |
| 30 | 22 OR 23 OR 24 OR 25 OR 26 OR 27 OR 28 OR 29 |
| 31 | 8 AND 30 |
| 32 | 14 OR 21 OR 31 |
| 33 | (ACCEPTABILITY).ti,ab |
| 34 | exp “ACCEPTABILITY”/ |
| 35 | 33 OR 34 |
| 36 | (DETECTION RATE).ti,ab |
| 37 | exp “DETECTION RATE”/ |
| 38 | 36 OR 37 |
| 39 | (SATISFACTION).ti,ab |
| 40 | exp “SATISFACTION”/ |
| 41 | 39 OR 40 |
| 42 | (QUALITY OF LIFE).ti,ab |
| 43 | exp “QUALITY OF LIFE”/ |
| 44 | 42 OR 43 |
| 45 | (COST EFFECTIVE).ti,ab |
| 46 | exp “COST EFFECTIVE”/ |
| 47 | 45 OR 46 |
| 48 | 35 OR 38 OR 41 OR 44 OR 47 |
| 49 | 5 AND 32 AND 48 |
| Eligibility criteria | Unselected, unaffected individuals at population level risk undergoing genetic testing for cancer predisposing genes; full text articles in English language. |
| Data extraction | Citations, abstracts extracted and reviewed by FG. Relevant papers reviewed by authors FG and RM. |
| Conclusions | Population genetic testing can overcome the limitations of family history/clinical criteria genetic testing. The technology to test populations on a large scale is available and the cost of testing is falling. Population based |
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection.
Publications and registered studies reporting population genetic testing outcomes.
| Publication/Registered Study | Country | Sample Size ( | Study Design | Population | Intervention | Outcomes | Follow Up | Quality of Study Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brown, 1995 [ | US | N/A | Cost-effectiveness analysis | General population | PGT for | Cost per life year gained | N/A | 31/100 £ |
| Cousens, 2017 [ | Australia | 370 | Prospective, survey | AJ women | Survey on | Attitudes; acceptability; interest | None | 13/16 # |
| Gabai-Kapara, 2014 [ | Israel | 8195 (& 694 relatives of carriers) | Prospective cohort | AJ men/women | PGT for AJ | Risk of BC/OC in female carriers ascertained through an unaffected male index subject | Not reported | 12/16 # |
| Lehmann, 2002 [ | US | 200 | Prospective, survey | AJ women | Telephone survey on | Attitudes; acceptability | None | 12/16 # |
| Lieberman, 2017 [ | Israel | 36 | Qualitative | AJ men/women | Semi structured interviews in individuals undergoing PGT for AJ | Motivators/barriers to testing; satisfaction | 18 months | Good ~ |
| Lieberman, 2017 [ | Israel | 1771 | Prospective cohort | AJ men/women | PGT for AJ | Uptake; post-test counselling compliance; satisfaction; anxiety; distress; increase in knowledge | 6 months | 12/16 # |
| Lieberman, 2018 [ | Israel | 1771 | Prospective, cohort | AJ men/women | PGT for AJ | Familial communication; cascade testing | 2 years | 12/16 # |
| Manchanda, 2015 [ | UK | 1034 | Randomised controlled trial | AJ men/women | PGT versus FH based testing of AJ | Acceptability; psychological impact; QoL | 3 months | 5/5 * |
| Manchanda, 2015 [ | UK | N/A | Cost-utility analysis | AJ women | PGT versus FH based testing for AJ | Incremental cost effectiveness ratio per quality adjusted life year | N/A | 96/100 £ |
| Manchanda, 2016 [ | UK | 936 | Cluster randomised non-inferiority trial | AJ men/women | DVD assisted versus standard face-to-face pre-test counselling in individuals undergoing PGT of AJ | Uptake; cancer risk perception; increase in knowledge; counselling time; satisfaction | N/A | 4/5 * |
| Manchanda, 2017 [ | UK, US | N/A | Cost-utility analysis | AJ women | PGT versus FH based testing for AJ | Incremental cost effectiveness ratio per quality adjusted life year | N/A | 90/100 £ |
| Manchanda, 2018 [ | UK, US | N/A | Cost-utility analysis | General population women | PGT versus FH based testing of | Incremental cost effectiveness ratio per quality adjusted life year | N/A | 96/100 £ |
| Meisel, 2016 [ | UK | 829 | Prospective, cohort | General population women | Survey | Interest; attitudes | None | 12/16 # |
| Meisel, 2017 [ | UK | 1031 | Randomised experimental survey | General population women | Brief information versus lengthier information to inform decision making about participating in a study (PROMISE study) on PGT for OC | Knowledge; intention; attitudes towards taking part in the PROMISE study | None | 3/5 * |
| Meisel, 2017 [ | UK | 837 | Cross-sectional survey | General population women | Survey on | Anticipated health behaviour change; perceived control to disclosure of OC/BC risk | None | 11/16 # |
| Metcalfe, 2010 [ | Canada | 2080 | Prospective, cohort | AJ/SJ women | PGT for Jewish | Mutation prevalence | None | 14/16 # |
| Metcalfe, 2010 [ | Canada | 2080 | Prospective, cohort | AJ/SJ women | PGT for Jewish | Satisfaction; cancer related distress; cancer risk perception | 1 year | 14/16 # |
| Metcalfe, 2012 [ | Canada | 2080 | Prospective, cohort | AJ/SJ women | PGT for Jewish | Cancer related distress; uptake of cancer risk reduction options | 2 years | 14/16 # |
| Patel, 2018 [ | UK, US | N/A | Cost-utility analysis | SJ women | PGT versus FH based testing for SJ BRCA1 founder mutations | Incremental cost effectiveness ratio per quality adjusted life year | N/A | 90/100 £ |
| Rubinstein, 2009 [ | US | N/A | Cost-utility analysis | AJ women | PGT for AJ | Incremental cost effectiveness ratio per quality adjusted life year | N/A | 71/100 £ |
| Schwartz, 2001 [ | US | 391 | Randomised controlled trial | AJ women | PGT for | Knowledge; perception of risks and limitations; interest | 1 month | 3/5 * |
| Shkedi-Rafid, 2012 [ | Israel | 14 | Qualitative | Unaffected BRCA1/BRCA2 AJ female carriers ascertained following a positive test result in a male family member who underwent PGT | Semi structured in-depth interviews on PGT for AJ | Emotional implications; motivations; consequences; attitudes | None | Good ~ |
| Tang, 2017 [ | US | 243 | Cross-sectional survey | Orthodox AJ women | Survey on PGT for | Knowledge; perceived BC risk/worry; religious/cultural factors affecting decision making | None | 13/16 # |
| Warner, 2005 [ | Australia | 300 | Prospective, cohort | AJ men/women | PGT for APC I1307K mutation, but non-disclosure of results | Acceptability; facilitators and barriers to testing | None | 10/16 # |
| PROMISE Feasibility Study [ | UK | 100 | Prospective, cohort | General population women | PGT for | Acceptability; risk perception; cancer worry; QoL; stratification of OC risk; uptake of risk management options; satisfaction/regret; follow up completion rate; telephone helpline use; decision aid use | 6 months | N/A |
| The Screen Project [ | Canada | 10,000 | Prospective, cohort | General population men/women | PGT for | Satisfaction; cancer worry | Not reported | N/A |
PGT—population genetic testing; FH—family history; AJ—Ashkenazi Jewish; SJ—Sephardi Jewish; QoL—quality of life; BC—breast cancer; OC—ovarian cancer; PROMISE—Predicting Risk of Ovarian Malignancy Improved Screening and Early detection Feasibility Study; ICER—incremental cost-effective ratio; QALY—quality adjusted life year; £ Quality of study assessed using Quality of Health Economic Studies (QHES) checklist; ˜ Quality of study assessed using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP) qualitative research checklist; * Quality of study assessed using the Jadad scale for reporting randomized controlled trials; # Quality of study assessed using the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies (MINORS) checklist.
Findings of publications and registered studies reporting population genetic testing outcomes.
| Publication/Registered Study | Findings |
|---|---|
| Brown, 1995 [ | Exploratory analysis for cost effectiveness of PGT for MMR gene mutations |
| Cousens, 2017 [ | 96.8% support a Jewish |
| Gabai-Kapara, 2014 [ | For female relatives with |
| Lehmann, 2002 [ | 40% AJ women interested in PGT for |
| Lieberman, 2017 [ | Motivators for |
| Lieberman, 2017 [ | |
| Lieberman, 2018 [ | 97% carriers informed at least one relative. FH and higher Satisfaction With Health Decision scores predicted results communication. FDRs had a higher rate of cascade/predictive testing than SDRs. Female relatives had a higher level of cascade testing than male relatives. |
| Manchanda, 2015 [ | Compared with FH based testing, PGT for |
| Manchanda, 2015 [ | PGT for AJ |
| Manchanda, 2016 [ | DVD-assisted counselling for PGT is non-inferior to face-to-face counselling for increase in knowledge; counselling satisfaction; risk perception and is equivalent for uptake. 98% found DVD length/information satisfactory. 85–89% felt it improved understanding of risks/benefits/implications/purpose of PGT. 95% would recommend it to others. |
| Manchanda, 2017 [ | PGT for |
| Manchanda, 2018 [ | Population panel genetic testing for |
| Meisel, 2016 [ | 85% reported they would ‘probably’ or ‘definitely’ take up PGT for OC which increased to 88% if test also informed BC risk. 92% anticipated they would ‘probably’ or ‘definitely’ participate in risk-stratified OC screening. University level education is associated with lower anticipated uptake of PGT. |
| Meisel, 2017 [ | No significant differences between participants receiving brief versus lengthier information to inform decision making in terms of OC knowledge/intention to participate in OC screening following PGT. 74% reported they would participate in OC screening based on PGT assessment. |
| Meisel, 2017 [ | UK women anticipate that they would engage in positive health behaviour changes in response to BC/OC risk disclosure. 72% reported ‘I would try harder to have a healthy lifestyle’; 55% felt ‘it would give me more control over my life’. Associations were independent of demographic factors or perceived risk of OC/BC. |
| Metcalfe, 2010 [ | Overall |
| Metcalfe, 2010 [ | In Jewish |
| Metcalfe, 2012 [ | Within 2 years of receiving a positive Jewish |
| Patel, 2018 [ | PGT is cost-effective for SJ |
| Rubinstein, 2009 [ | Compared to a no testing policy, PGT for AJ |
| Schwartz, 2001 [ | Compared to the BC education control material, the PGT education material led to increased knowledge; increased perception of the risks/limitations of testing; and a decreased interest in obtaining a |
| Shkedi-Rafid, 2012 [ | Having no FH of cancer was a source of optimism but also confusion; engaging in intensified medical surveillance and undergoing preventive procedures was perceived as health promoting but also induced a sense of physical/psychological vulnerability; overall support for population |
| Tang, 2017 [ | 49% had adequate genetic testing knowledge; 46% had accurate BC risk perceptions. 20% reported they probably/definitely will get tested; 28% probably/definitely will not get tested; 46% had not thought about |
| Warner, 2005 [ | Following pre-test counselling 94% acceptability for PGT for colorectal cancer, but participants were not disclosed results. Facilitators: desire for information for their families; to decrease personal cancer risk. Barriers: insurance discrimination; test accuracy; confidentiality. |
| PROMISE Feasibility Study [ | Not reported. Study closed to recruitment and in follow up phase. |
| The Screen Project | Not reported. Study actively recruiting. |
PGT—population genetic testing; FH—family history; AJ—Ashkenazi Jewish; QoL—quality of life; BC—breast cancer; OC—ovarian cancer; FDR—first degree relative; SDR—second degree relative; ICER—incremental cost-effective ratio; QALY—quality adjusted life year.