| Literature DB >> 31371819 |
Tammy K Stump1, Lisa G Aspinwall2, Danielle M Drummond2, Jennifer M Taber3, Wendy Kohlmann4, Marjan Champine4, Pamela B Cassidy5, Tracy Petrie5, Ben Liley6, Sancy A Leachman5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study investigated whether genetic counseling and test reporting for the highly penetrant CDKN2A melanoma predisposition gene promoted decreases in sun exposure.Entities:
Keywords: CDKN2A/p16; familial melanoma; genetic counseling and testing; sun protection; sunburns
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31371819 PMCID: PMC6946876 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-019-0608-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Figure 1.Recruitment, retention, and attrition for the BRIGHT study.
Note. “Passive Withdrawal” indicates failure to schedule and/or attend a planned follow-up assessment with no stated reason.
Figure 2.Change in sun exposure from baseline through one year post-counseling among CDKN2A carriers, CDKN2A noncarriers, and no-test controls.
Note. Changes from baseline in each group indicated by *p<.05, ^p<.10
Multilevel models examining changes in sun exposure from baseline through one year after counseling in each study group
| UVR Dose | Wrist Pigmentation | Face Pigmentation | Sunburns | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95% CI | 95% CI | 95% CI | 95% CI | |||||
| Intercept | 1.32 | .92, 1.73 | .82 | .73, .91 | .66 | .60, .72 | 1.45 | .93, 1.96 |
| Counseling Visit | -- | -- | −.05[ | −.11, .01 | .02 | −.02, .06 | -- | -- |
| One Month Post-Counseling | −.36 | −.67, −.05 | −.06 | −.13, .01 | .03 | −.01, .07 | -- | -- |
| One Year Post-Counseling | −.52 | −.81, −.24 | −.11 | −.17, −.05 | .01 | −.03, .04 | −.49[ | −1.03, .07 |
| Noncarrier | .10 | −.39, .58 | −.02 | −.12, .09 | .01 | −.06, .09 | .33 | −.26, .92 |
| No-Test Control | −.50[ | −1.03, .03 | −.06 | −.18, .06 | .02 | −.07, .10 | −.43 | −1.10, .24 |
| Assessment Date – Linear | −.002 | −.005, .001 | .002 | .001, .002 | −7.63E-5 | −5.20E-4, 3.68E-4 | 1.02E-4 | −.004, .004 |
| Assessment Date – Quadratic | −6.00E- 5 | −9.70E-5, −2.30E-5 | −1.57E5 | −1.96E-5, −1.18E-5 | −4.25E-6 | −6.70E-6, −1.80E-6 | −2.03E-5 | −7.25E-5, 3.19E-5 |
| Skin Type | .13 | −.23, .50 | .14 | .06, .22 | .02 | −.03, .08 | .07 | −.35, .50 |
| Age (years) | −.002 | −.01, .01 | .003 | .0002, .005 | .003 | .0007, .004 | −.01 | −.03, −.001 |
| Gender | .40 | .07, .73 | .21 | .13, .28 | .09 | .04, .14 | .11 | −.27, .50 |
| Propensity Score | −.81 | −1.50, −.12 | −.09 | −.24, −.07 | −.05 | −.16, .06 | −.95 | −1.78, −.12 |
| Counseling Visit | -- | -- | .03 | −.04, .10 | .002 | −.04, .05 | -- | -- |
| Counseling Visit | -- | -- | .04 | −.03, .11 | −.02 | −.06, .03 | -- | -- |
| Month | .48 | .08, .88 | .06[ | −.01, .14 | .001 | −.04, .05 | -- | -- |
| Month | .47 | .11, .85 | .06[ | −.01, .13 | .0001 | −.04, .04 | -- | -- |
| Year | .34[ | −.04, .72 | .13 | .05, .20 | .02 | −.03, .06 | .62[ | −.08, 1.32 |
| Year | .20 | −.16, .56 | .13 | .06, .20 | .02 | −.02, .07 | .57 | −.12, 1.26 |
p<.001,
p<.01,
p<.05,
p<.10
Note. Assessment date was centered at July 1, and entered as both a linear and squared term to capture the curvilinear trend of ambient UVR peaking during mid-summer. Clinician-rated Fitzpatrick skin type was centered at type 2; age was mean-centered; gender was effect-coded (male=.5); propensity scores were centered at .5, representing 50% probability of being a member of a CDKN2A+ family. Separate dummy-coded variables were added to represent changes from baseline to each subsequent assessment (counseling, one month post-counseling, one year post-counseling). For UVR dose analyses, this baseline period included the 27 days following the baseline visit but preceding genetic counseling.