Literature DB >> 34019162

Risk-Adjusted Prevention. Perspectives on the Governance of Entitlements to Benefits in the Case of Genetic (Breast Cancer) Risks.

Friedhelm Meier1, Anke Harney2, Kerstin Rhiem3, Silke Neusser4, Anja Neumann4, Matthias Braun5, Jürgen Wasem4, Stefan Huster2, Peter Dabrock5, Rita Katharina Schmutzler3.   

Abstract

This article is a revised version of our proposal for the establishment of the legal concept of risk-adjusted prevention in the German healthcare system to regulate access to risk-reduction measures for persons at high and moderate genetic cancer risk (Meier et al. Risikoadaptierte Prävention'. Governance Perspective für Leistungsansprüche bei genetischen (Brustkrebs-)Risiken, Springer, Wiesbaden, 2018). The German context specifics are summarized to enable the source text to be used for other country-specific healthcare systems. Establishing such a legal concept is relevant to all universal and free healthcare systems similar to Germany's. Disease risks can be determined with increasing precision using bioinformatics and biostatistical innovations ('big data'), due to the identification of pathogenic germ line mutations in cancer risk genes as well as non-genetic factors and their interactions. These new technologies open up opportunities to adapt therapeutic and preventive measures to the individual risk profile of complex diseases in a way that was previously unknown, enabling not only adequate treatment but in the best case, prevention. Access to risk-reduction measures for carriers of genetic risks is generally not regulated in healthcare systems that guarantee universal and equal access to healthcare benefits. In many countries, including Austria, Denmark, the UK and the US, entitlement to benefits is essentially linked to the treatment of already manifest disease. Issues around claiming benefits for prophylactic measures involve not only evaluation of clinical options (genetic diagnostics, chemoprevention, risk-reduction surgery), but the financial cost and-from a social ethics perspective-the relationship between them. Section 1 of this chapter uses the specific example of hereditary breast cancer to show why from a medical, social-legal, health-economic and socio-ethical perspective, regulated entitlement to benefits is necessary for persons at high and moderate risk of cancer. Section 2 discusses the medical needs of persons with genetic cancer risks and goes on to develop the healthy sick model which is able to integrate the problems of the different disciplines into one scheme and to establish criteria for the legal acknowledgement of persons at high and moderate (breast cancer) risks. In the German context, the social-legal categories of classical therapeutic medicine do not adequately represent preventive measures as a regular service within the healthcare system. We propose risk-adjusted prevention as a new legal concept based on the heuristic healthy sick model. This category can serve as a legal framework for social law regulation in the case of persons with genetic cancer risks. Risk-adjusted prevention can be established in principle in any healthcare system. Criteria are also developed in relation to risk collectives and allocation (Sects. 3, 4, 5).

Entities:  

Keywords:  BRCA1/2; Big data; Entitlements to benefit; Genetic risk; Health policy; International health law; Preventive measures; Systems medicine

Year:  2021        PMID: 34019162     DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-63749-1_5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Recent Results Cancer Res        ISSN: 0080-0015


  24 in total

1.  The Medicalization of Health and Shared Responsibility.

Authors:  Gianmarco Contino
Journal:  New Bioeth       Date:  2016-04

2.  Association of risk-reducing surgery in BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers with cancer risk and mortality.

Authors:  Susan M Domchek; Tara M Friebel; Christian F Singer; D Gareth Evans; Henry T Lynch; Claudine Isaacs; Judy E Garber; Susan L Neuhausen; Ellen Matloff; Rosalind Eeles; Gabriella Pichert; Laura Van t'veer; Nadine Tung; Jeffrey N Weitzel; Fergus J Couch; Wendy S Rubinstein; Patricia A Ganz; Mary B Daly; Olufunmilayo I Olopade; Gail Tomlinson; Joellen Schildkraut; Joanne L Blum; Timothy R Rebbeck
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 56.272

3.  Bilateral prophylactic mastectomy in women with inherited risk of breast cancer--prevalence of pain and discomfort, impact on sexuality, quality of life and feelings of regret two years after surgery.

Authors:  Jessica Gahm; Marie Wickman; Yvonne Brandberg
Journal:  Breast       Date:  2010-06-03       Impact factor: 4.380

4.  Common breast cancer-predisposition alleles are associated with breast cancer risk in BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers.

Authors:  Antonis C Antoniou; Amanda B Spurdle; Olga M Sinilnikova; Sue Healey; Karen A Pooley; Rita K Schmutzler; Beatrix Versmold; Christoph Engel; Alfons Meindl; Norbert Arnold; Wera Hofmann; Christian Sutter; Dieter Niederacher; Helmut Deissler; Trinidad Caldes; Kati Kämpjärvi; Heli Nevanlinna; Jacques Simard; Jonathan Beesley; Xiaoqing Chen; Susan L Neuhausen; Timothy R Rebbeck; Theresa Wagner; Henry T Lynch; Claudine Isaacs; Jeffrey Weitzel; Patricia A Ganz; Mary B Daly; Gail Tomlinson; Olufunmilayo I Olopade; Joanne L Blum; Fergus J Couch; Paolo Peterlongo; Siranoush Manoukian; Monica Barile; Paolo Radice; Csilla I Szabo; Lutecia H Mateus Pereira; Mark H Greene; Gad Rennert; Flavio Lejbkowicz; Ofra Barnett-Griness; Irene L Andrulis; Hilmi Ozcelik; Anne-Marie Gerdes; Maria A Caligo; Yael Laitman; Bella Kaufman; Roni Milgrom; Eitan Friedman; Susan M Domchek; Katherine L Nathanson; Ana Osorio; Gemma Llort; Roger L Milne; Javier Benítez; Ute Hamann; Frans B L Hogervorst; Peggy Manders; Marjolijn J L Ligtenberg; Ans M W van den Ouweland; Susan Peock; Margaret Cook; Radka Platte; D Gareth Evans; Rosalind Eeles; Gabriella Pichert; Carol Chu; Diana Eccles; Rosemarie Davidson; Fiona Douglas; Andrew K Godwin; Laure Barjhoux; Sylvie Mazoyer; Hagay Sobol; Violaine Bourdon; François Eisinger; Agnès Chompret; Corinne Capoulade; Brigitte Bressac-de Paillerets; Gilbert M Lenoir; Marion Gauthier-Villars; Claude Houdayer; Dominique Stoppa-Lyonnet; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Douglas F Easton
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2008-03-20       Impact factor: 11.025

5.  Cost-effectiveness of preventive strategies for women with a BRCA1 or a BRCA2 mutation.

Authors:  Kristin Anderson; Judith S Jacobson; Daniel F Heitjan; Joshua Graff Zivin; Dawn Hershman; Alfred I Neugut; Victor R Grann
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2006-03-21       Impact factor: 25.391

6.  Role of alkyl substitution in 2,3-disubstituted and 3-substituted 4-quinazolones on the inhibition of pyruvic acid oxidation.

Authors:  S S Parmar; K Kishor; P K Seth; R C Arora
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  1969-01       Impact factor: 7.446

7.  Cost-effectiveness of alternating magnetic resonance imaging and digital mammography screening in BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene mutation carriers.

Authors:  Jessica E Cott Chubiz; Janie M Lee; Michael E Gilmore; Chung Y Kong; Kathryn P Lowry; Elkan F Halpern; Pamela M McMahon; Paula D Ryan; G Scott Gazelle
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2012-11-26       Impact factor: 6.860

8.  Prevalence of pathogenic BRCA1/2 germline mutations among 802 women with unilateral triple-negative breast cancer without family cancer history.

Authors:  Christoph Engel; Kerstin Rhiem; Eric Hahnen; Sibylle Loibl; Karsten E Weber; Sabine Seiler; Silke Zachariae; Jan Hauke; Barbara Wappenschmidt; Anke Waha; Britta Blümcke; Marion Kiechle; Alfons Meindl; Dieter Niederacher; Claus R Bartram; Dorothee Speiser; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Norbert Arnold; Peter Wieacker; Elena Leinert; Andrea Gehrig; Susanne Briest; Karin Kast; Olaf Riess; Günter Emons; Bernhard H F Weber; Jutta Engel; Rita K Schmutzler
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2018-03-07       Impact factor: 4.430

Review 9.  Cancer genetics services: a systematic review of the economic evidence and issues.

Authors:  G L Griffith; R T Edwards; J Gray
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2004-05-04       Impact factor: 7.640

10.  Tamoxifen for prevention of breast cancer: extended long-term follow-up of the IBIS-I breast cancer prevention trial.

Authors:  Jack Cuzick; Ivana Sestak; Simon Cawthorn; Hisham Hamed; Kaija Holli; Anthony Howell; John F Forbes
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2014-12-11       Impact factor: 41.316

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