| Literature DB >> 33014209 |
Carol A Mansfield1, Kelly A Metcalfe2, Carrie Snyder3,4, Geoffrey J Lindeman5,6,7,8, Joshua Posner1, Sue Friedman9, Henry T Lynch3, Steven A Narod2, D Gareth Evans10, Alexander Liede11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation have high lifetime risks of developing breast and ovarian cancer. The decision to embark on risk reduction strategies is a difficult and personal one. We surveyed an international group of women with BRCA mutations and measured choices and sequence of breast cancer risk reduction strategies.Entities:
Keywords: BRCA1; BRCA2; Choices; High-risk women; International study; Preferences; Prevention; Risk-reducing surgeries; Survey; Unaffected women
Year: 2020 PMID: 33014209 PMCID: PMC7526374 DOI: 10.1186/s13053-020-00152-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hered Cancer Clin Pract ISSN: 1731-2302 Impact factor: 2.857
Fig. 1Treatment Choices With Denosumab-Like and a Tamoxifen-Like Medicines. a. Medicine 1, a Denosumab-Like Medicinea. b. Medicine 2, a Tamoxifen-Like Medicinea. a Illustration describes the choices used to elicit women’s preferences for breast cancer risk reduction
Respondent Characteristics, N = 598 (unless otherwise noted)
| Characteristic | Full Sample |
|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD), years | 40.9 (8.2) |
| Age 40 years or older | 335 (56%) |
| Has children | 416 (70%) |
| Hopes to have children in future (after mutation identified) or undecideda | 268 (45%) |
| White or Caucasian | 558 (93%) |
| Married/living as married/civil partnership | 440 (74%) |
| Higher education (defined as post-secondary/any college and higher) | 401 (67%) |
| Employed full time | 329 (55%) |
| Country of residence | |
| United States | 331 (55%) |
| United Kingdom | 117 (20%) |
| Australia | 119 (20%) |
| Canada | 31 (5%) |
| Mutation | |
| | 310 (52%) |
| | 273 (46%) |
| | 8 (1%) |
| Don’t know or not sure | 7 (1%) |
| Mean time since genetic test, years (SD) | 4.8 (4.3) |
| First degree relative with breast cancer | 374 (63%) |
| First degree relative with ovarian cancer | 122 (20%) |
| Risk-reducing treatments | |
| RRBM only | 95 (16%) |
| RRBSO only | 112 (19%) |
| RRBM and RRBSO | 198 (33%) |
| Has taken a prescription medication, such as tamoxifen, raloxifene, or an aromatase inhibitor [anastrazole, exemestane] | 33 (6%) |
| n | 305 |
| Very likely or somewhat likely to undergo RRBM in the futureb | 193 (63%) |
| n | 288 |
| Very likely or somewhat likely to undergo RRBSO in the futurec | 255 (89%) |
| nd | 587 |
| Assigned to Susan, age 25 years | 285 (48%) |
| Assigned to Susan, age 36 years | 302 (51%) |
RRBM Risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy, RRBSO Bilateral salpingo oophorectomy, SD Standard deviation
a Includes women who indicated that they wanted to have children or have more children in the future or were undecided about having children or having more children and women who have children that were born after their BRCA 1 or BRCA2 mutation was identified
b Based on the question “How likely are you to have a surgery to remove both breasts (risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy) in the future?” with the response choices very likely, somewhat likely, unlikely, very unlikely, don’t know or not sure
c Based on the question “How likely are you to get your ovaries and fallopian tubes removed in the future?” with the response choices very likely, somewhat likely, unlikely, very unlikely, don’t know or not sure
dThree respondents did not complete the full survey, thus were not assigned to a Susan age group and did not answer any of the four Susan treatment sequencing questions. An additional four respondents assigned to Susan, age 25 and four respondents assigned to Susan, age 36 also did not answer any of the four Susan treatment sequencing questions presented in the survey. Thus, these 11 respondents are not included in the two Susan group sample totals summarized in Table 1 and were not included in the Susan treatment sequence analysis presented in this article
Responses to Treatment Sequencing Questions (N = 598, unless otherwise noted)
| Summaries | Treatment Option | Value, n (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment option ever selected as part of treatment sequence | RRBM | 441 (73.7) |
| RRBSO | 470 (78.6) | |
| Medicine (Medicine 1 or Medicine 2) | 178 (29.8) | |
| Among respondents assigned to Medicine 1b | ||
| n | 289 | |
| Medicine 1 | 90 (31.1) | |
| Among respondents assigned to Medicine 2b | ||
| n | 309 | |
| Medicine 2 | 88 (28.5) | |
| Among respondents assigned to Susan, age 25 yearsc | ||
| Treatment option ever selected as part of the Susan treatment sequence | nd | 285 |
| RRBM | 157 (55.1) | |
| RRBSO | 110 (38.6) | |
| Medicine 1 | 87 (30.5) | |
| Among respondents assigned to Susan, age 36 yearsc | ||
| Treatment option ever selected as part of the Susan treatment sequence | ne | 302 |
| RRBM | 214 (70.9) | |
| RRBSO | 147 (48.7) | |
| Medicine 2 | 68 (22.5) | |
ONJ Osteonecrosis of the jaw, RRBM Risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy, RRBSO Bilateral salpingo oophorectomy
aRespondents were asked to think back to when they first discovered their BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation and to assume that the 4 choices presented in Fig. 1a/1b were all available. They were then asked to select the first action they would take if the four options presented were their only choices. The survey directed respondents who selected screening only to indicate how long they would screen before moving on to another treatment. Respondents were asked to continue reporting their treatment choices in sequence until they reached the point at which they would choose not to take any additional action, and to continue only with screening. Respondents were then asked to make the same choices for Susan, age 25 or Susan, age 36; a hypothetical woman described on the Methods section
bRespondents were randomly assigned to either Medicine 1 (50% breast cancer risk reduction, take for 3 years, cannot get pregnant during treatment, no effect on female hormone levels, 5% risk of ONJ, no risk of uterine cancer, injection at doctor’s office every 3 months) or Medicine 2 (40% breast cancer risk reduction, take for 5 years, cannot get pregnant during treatment, temporary menopause-like symptoms, no risk of ONJ, 1% risk of uterine cancer, daily pill)
cAll respondents assigned to Susan, age 25 years, were assigned to view Medicine 1; all respondents assigned to Susan, age 36 years, were assigned to Medicine 2
d289 were assigned; 285 answered these treatment-sequencing questions. Thus all are not included in the sample total
e306 were assigned; 302 answered these treatment-sequencing questions. Of the 309 respondents eligible because they were assigned to Medicine 2, 3 did not complete the full survey and are not included in the sample total
Fig. 2Respondent’s Choices for Herself. a. Path Selected Most Oftena. b. Path Starting With Medicine Selected Most Oftena. Q3M = quarterly; RRBM = risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy; RRBSO = bilateral salpingo oophorectomy. a Sunburst diagram used to visualize hierarchical data using concentric circles. The circle in the center represents the first choice (or root node) as indicated by respondents, with the hierarchy moving outward from the center indicating women’s second, third, and fourth choices. Online, dynamic versions of Sunburst diagrams can be found at https://docs.novisci.com/sunburst+breast+cancer+treatment+survey/
Fig. 3Respondent’s Choices for Susan (25 Years Old). a. Path Selected Most Oftena. b. Path Starting With Medicine Selected Most Oftena. Q3M = quarterly; RRBM = risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy; RRBSO = bilateral salpingo oophorectomy. a Sunburst diagram used to visualize hierarchical data using concentric circles. The circle in the center represents the first choice (or root node) as indicated by respondents, with the hierarchy moving outward from the center indicating women’s second, third, and fourth choices. Online, dynamic versions of Sunburst diagrams can be found at https://docs.novisci.com/sunburst+breast+cancer+treatment+survey/
Fig. 4Respondent’s Choices for Susan (36 Years Old). a. Path Selected Most Oftena. b. Path Starting With Medicine Selected Most Oftena. Q3M = quarterly; RRBM = risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy; RRBSO = bilateral salpingo oophorectomy. a Sunburst diagram used to visualize hierarchical data using concentric circles. The circle in the center represents the first choice (or root node) as indicated by respondents, with the hierarchy moving outward from the center indicating women’s second, third, and fourth choices. Online, dynamic versions of Sunburst diagrams can be found at https://docs.novisci.com/sunburst+breast+cancer+treatment+survey/
Logit Models: Predicting Respondents Who Would Choose a Medicine for Herself
| Characteristic | All Women | Women Assigned to See Medicine 1, a Denosumab-Like Medicine | Women Assigned to See Medicine 2, a Tamoxifen-Like Medicine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age 40 years or over | 0.953 (0.563–1.614) | 1.446 (0.678–3.083) | 0.651 (0.298–1.423) |
| Hopes to have children in future (after mutation identified) or undecided | 0.792 (0.468–1.338) | 0.772 (0.354–1.683) | 0.806 (0.380–1.711) |
| Time since genetic test | 1.051* (1.007–1.097) | 1.095* (1.029–1.165) | 1.014 (0.952–1.080) |
| First-degree relative with breast cancer | 0.962 (0.657–1.409) | 0.821 (0.474–1.422) | 1.086 (0.627–1.879) |
| First-degree relative with ovarian cancer | 1.240 (0.795–1.935) | 1.401 (0.736–2.669) | 1.305 (0.681–2.498) |
| RRBM only | 0.693 (0.398–1.207) | 1.284 (0.538–3.063) | 0.468* (0.220–0.996) |
| RRBSO only | 0.753 (0.408–1.390) | 0.951 (0.385–2.349) | 0.546 (0.224–1.331) |
| RRBM and RRBSO | 0.383* (0.211–0.697) | 0.331* (0.134–0.816) | 0.424* (0.182–0.987) |
| Higher education | 0.843 (0.573–1.241) | 0.933 (0.524–1.663) | 0.761 (0.440–1.316) |
| Has taken a prescription medication, such as tamoxifen, raloxifene, or an aromatase inhibitor [anastrazole, exemestane] | 2.524* (1.198–5.316) | 1.683 (0.565–5.015) | 3.506* (1.214–10.124) |
CI Confidence interval, OR Odds ratio, RRBM Risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy, RRBSO Bilateral salpingo oophorectomy
*Statistically significant at 95% confidence level
Logit Models: Predicting Respondents Who Would Choose a Medicine for Susan
| Characteristic | All Women | Women Assigned to See Susan Age 25 Years and Medicine 1, a Denosumab-Like Medicine | Women Assigned to See Susan Age 36 Years and Medicine 2, a Tamoxifen-Like Medicine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age 40 years or over | 0.983 (0.568–1.703) | 1.342 (0.636–2.831) | 0.656 (0.274–1.571) |
| Hopes to have children in future (after mutation identified) or undecided | 1.054 (0.604–1.838) | 0.830 (0.378–1.823) | 1.347 (0.580–3.129) |
| Time since genetic test | 1.000 (0.957–1.046) | 0.989 (0.929–1.052) | 1.015 (0.948–1.086) |
| First-degree relative BC | 1.354 (0.898–2.040) | 1.072 (0.617–1.864) | 1.924* (1.017–3.638) |
| First-degree relative OC | 1.049 (0.659–1.669) | 0.946 (0.496–1.807) | 1.378 (0.680–2.795) |
| RRBM only | 0.806 (0.441–1.473) | 1.30 (0.545–3.392) | 0.485 (0.209–1.127) |
| RRBSO only | 1.325 (0.692–2.539) | 1.915 (0.748–4.899) | 1.010 (0.387–2.637) |
| RRBM and RRBSO | 0.851 (0.456–1.586) | 1.227 (0.503–2.993) | 0.607 (0.235–1.570) |
| Higher education | 0.880 (0.588–1.316) | 1.325 (0.745–2.358) | 0.584 (0.321–1.064) |
| Has taken a prescription medication, such as tamoxifen, raloxifene, or an aromatase inhibitor [anastrazole, exemestane] | 1.799 (0.840–3.855) | 0.850 (0.265–2.725) | 3.321* (1.129–9.771) |
| Assigned to Susan, age 25 years | 1.500* (1.031–2.183) | Not applicable | Not applicable |
BC Breast cancer, CI Confidence interval, OC Ovarian cancer, OR Odds ratio, RRBM Risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy, RRBSO Bilateral salpingo oophorectomy
*Statistically significant at 95% confidence level