| Literature DB >> 35033023 |
Linda Rainey1, Daniëlle van der Waal2, Louise S Donnelly3, Jake Southworth4, David P French5, D Gareth Evans4,6,7, Mireille J M Broeders8,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Predicting Risk of Cancer at Screening (PROCAS) study provided women who were eligible for breast cancer screening in Greater Manchester (United Kingdom) with their 10-year risk of breast cancer, i.e., low (≤1.5%), average (1.5-4.99%), moderate (5.-7.99%) or high (≥8%). The aim of this study is to explore which factors were associated with women's uptake of screening and prevention recommendations. Additionally, we evaluated women's organisational preferences regarding tailored screening.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Prevention; Risk assessment; Screening; Uptake
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35033023 PMCID: PMC8761310 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-022-09174-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Risk-tailored screening and prevention pathways of the PROCAS study
General characteristics of all participants, and for each self-reported breast cancer risk category
| All women | Low risk | Average risk | Moderate risk | High risk | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years), mean (SD)a | 61.3 | (4.9) | 61.9 | (4.7) | 61.5 | (5.1) | 61.8 | (4.9) | 60.0 | (4.6) |
| Education level, n (%)b | ||||||||||
| Lower education | 68 | (20.9) | 14 | (23.3) | 27 | (21.6) | 14 | (17.5) | 13 | (21.7) |
| Higher secondary education | 98 | (30.2) | 13 | (21.7) | 42 | (33.6) | 26 | (32.5) | 17 | (28.3) |
| Higher vocational qualification | 131 | (40.3) | 24 | (40.0) | 46 | (36.8) | 37 | (46.3) | 24 | (40.0) |
| Marital status, n living with partner (%) | 256 | (78.8) | 54 | (90.0) | 94 | (75.2) | 61 | (76.3) | 47 | (78.3) |
| First degree family history breast cancer, n yes (%) | 138 | (42.5) | 4 | (6.7) | 41 | (32.8) | 49 | (61.3) | 44 | (73.3) |
| Body mass index (kg/m2), mean (SD)c | 24.9 | (3.5) | 25.1 | (3.3) | 24.7 | (3.5) | 24.8 | (3.4) | 25.3 | (3.8) |
| Medical condition, | 164 | (50.5) | 27 | (45.0) | 68 | (54.4) | 47 | (58.8) | 22 | (36.7) |
| Current medication use, n yes (%) | 144 | (44.3) | 30 | (50.0) | 56 | (44.8) | 33 | (41.3) | 25 | (41.7) |
| Current MHTd use, n yes (%) | 26 | (8.0) | 8 | (13.3) | 14 | (11.2) | 4 | (5.0) | 20 | (33.3) |
| Benign breast disease, n yes (%)e | 121 | (37.2) | 21 | (35.0) | 41 | (32.8) | 35 | (43.8) | 24 | (40.0) |
| Previous breast biopsy, n yes (%)f | 81 | (24.9) | 10 | (16.7) | 30 | (24.0) | 21 | (26.3) | 20 | (33.3) |
| General health score, mean (SD) | 82.7 | (14.6) | 84.1 | (17.5) | 81.3 | (15.0) | 84.4 | (11.9) | 81.7 | (14.2) |
| Life events, n ≥ 2 (%) | 89 | (27.4) | 15 | (25.0) | 34 | (27.2) | 24 | (30.0) | 16 | (26.7) |
| Health locus of controlg, n (%) | ||||||||||
| Internal | 109 | (33.5) | 21 | (35.0) | 44 | (35.2) | 23 | (28.7) | 21 | (35.0) |
| Physician | 11 | (3.4) | 2 | (3.3) | 5 | (4.0) | 2 | (2.5) | 2 | (3.3) |
| Chance | 167 | (51.4) | 31 | (51.7) | 61 | (48.8) | 47 | (58.8) | 28 | (46.7) |
| No clear preference | 38 | (11.7) | 6 | (10.0) | 15 | (12.0) | 8 | (10.0) | 9 | (15.0) |
| Belief in medicines, mean (SD) | ||||||||||
| Harm | 7.9 | (2.3) | 8.5 | (2.6) | 7.8 | (2.2) | 8.0 | (2.2) | 7.3 | (2.2) |
| Overuse | 11.3 | (3.0) | 11.6 | (3.0) | 11.2 | (2.8) | 11.6 | (3.2) | 10.9 | (3.0) |
| Health anxiety, mean (SD) | 10.8 | (4.9) | 8.8 | (4.4) | 10.8 | (4.9) | 11.2 | (4.3) | 12.2 | (5.4) |
a n = 19 missing values (5.8%); b n = 28 missing values (8.6%); c n = 21 missing values (6.5%); d Menopause hormone therapy; e n = 11 missing values (3.4%); f n = 5 missing values (1.5%); g HLoC health locus of control
Women’s organisational preferences and adoption of health behaviours after risk feedback
| Risk result in letter, n acceptable (%)a | 251 | (77.2) | 53 | (88.3) | 104 | (83.2) | 61 | (76.3) | 33 | (55.0) |
| Need for consultation, n yes (%) | 99 | (30.5) | 2 | (3.3) | 24 | (19.2) | 28 | (35.0) | 45 | (75.0) |
| Preferred risk counsellor, n (%)b | ||||||||||
| General practitioner | 49 | (49.5) | 1 | (50.0) | 14 | (40.0) | 11 | (30.6) | 23 | (30.3) |
| Oncologist | 42 | (42.4) | 1 | (50.0) | 11 | (31.4) | 11 | (30.6) | 19 | (25.0) |
| Geneticist | 37 | (37.4) | – | – | 2 | (5.7) | 10 | (27.7) | 25 | (32.9) |
| Nurse | 21 | (21.2) | – | – | 8 | (22.9) | 4 | (11.1) | 9 | (11.8) |
| Radiologist | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Radiographer | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Use website, n yes (%) | 243 | (74.8) | 41 | (68.3) | 97 | (77.6) | 59 | (73.8) | 46 | (76.7) |
| Screening intent, n yes (%)c | 308 | (94.8) | 54 | (90.0) | 123 | (98.4) | 78 | (97.5) | 53 | (88.3) |
| Supplemental mammography intent, n yes (%)d | 47 | (22.9) | n/a | 16 | (12.8) | 31 | (38.8) | n/a | ||
| Preferred screening interval low risk | ||||||||||
| 3-year | 34 | (56.7) | ||||||||
| 4-year | 20 | (33.3) | ||||||||
| 5-year | 4 | (6.7) | ||||||||
| Don’t know | 2 | (3.3) | ||||||||
| Preferred screening interval high risk | ||||||||||
| 6-month | 5 | (8.3) | ||||||||
| 1-year | 34 | (56.7) | ||||||||
| 18-month | 16 | (26.6) | ||||||||
| 2-year | 3 | (5.0) | ||||||||
| 3-year | 1 | (1.7) | ||||||||
| Don’t know | 1 | (1.7) | ||||||||
| Increased breast self-exam, n yes (%) | 124 | (38.2) | 12 | (20.0) | 36 | (28.8) | 39 | (48.8) | 37 | (61.7) |
| Changed diet (%) | ||||||||||
| Yes | 77 | (23.7) | 7 | (11.7) | 20 | (16.0) | 23 | (28.7) | 27 | (45.0) |
| No | 69 | (21.2) | 10 | (16.7) | 37 | (29.6) | 12 | (15.0) | 10 | (16.7) |
| No, not required | 179 | (55.1) | 43 | (71.6) | 68 | (54.4) | 45 | (56.3) | 23 | (38.3) |
| Changed exercise habits, n (%) | ||||||||||
| Yes | 86 | (26.5) | 16 | (26.7) | 28 | (22.4) | 16 | (20.0) | 18 | (30.0) |
| No | 102 | (31.4) | 15 | (25.0) | 48 | (38.4) | 23 | (28.8) | 16 | (26.7) |
| No, not required | 137 | (42.1) | 29 | (48.3) | 49 | (39.2) | 41 | (51.2) | 26 | (43.3) |
| Changed alcohol intake, n (%) | ||||||||||
| Yes | 65 | (20.0) | 12 | (20.0) | 22 | (17.6) | 17 | (21.2) | 14 | (23.3) |
| No | 107 | (34.8) | 17 | (28.3) | 47 | (37.6) | 23 | (28.8) | 20 | (33.3) |
| No, not required | 153 | (47.2) | 31 | (51.7) | 56 | (44.8) | 40 | (50.0) | 26 | (43.4) |
| Started medication, n yes (%)e | 46 | (50.0) | n/a | n/a | 13 | (31.7) | 33 | (66.0) | ||
| Willing to consider medication, n yes (%)f | 16 | (33.3) | n/a | n/a | 13 | (33.3) | 3 | (33.3) | ||
| Tamoxifen preference, n (%) | ||||||||||
| Pill | 73 | (52.1) | n/a | n/a | 32 | (40.0) | 41 | (68.4) | ||
| Cream | 22 | (15.7) | n/a | n/a | 17 | (21.3) | 5 | (8.3) | ||
| No preference | 9 | (6.4) | n/a | n/a | 8 | (10.0) | 1 | (1.7) | ||
| Neither | 28 | (20.1) | n/a | n/a | 17 | (21.3) | 11 | (18.3) | ||
| Don’t know | 8 | (5.7) | n/a | n/a | 6 | (7.4) | 2 | (3.3) | ||
a High-risk women did not receive their risk result in a letter, but were asked about a hypothetical scenario; b Percentages based on the number of women who perceived a need for a consultation, women could mark multiple options; c Based on stratified interval displayed in Fig. 1; d Based on a 4-year screening interval for low-risk women, and a 3-year screening interval for average and moderate risk women, e Based on number of women who indicated that tamoxifen was discussed with them for the PROCAS study; f Based on number of women who were eligible for preventative medication but indicated that it was not discussed with them for the PROCAS study
Explorative analyses of factors associated with early detection behaviours after risk feedback with tailored screening recommendations
| Characteristic | Supplemental mammography intent | Increased breast self-examination |
|---|---|---|
| Multi-adjusted | Multi-adjusted | |
| ORb (95% CI) | ORb (95% CI) | |
| Self-reported breast cancer risk | ||
| Low | n/a | 0.66 (0.30, 1.45) |
| Average | Reference | Reference |
| Moderate | ||
| High | n/a | |
| Age (year)c | 1.03 (0.97, 1.10) | 0.98 (0.93, 1.03) |
| Education | ||
| Lower | Reference | Reference |
| Higher secondary | 1.03 (0.44, 2.39) | 0.90 (0.46, 1.74) |
| Higher vocational | 0.73 (0.32, 1.63) | 0.54 (0.28, 1.03) |
| FDRd with breast cancer | ||
| No | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 1.10 (0.64, 1.90) | |
| Benign breast disease | ||
| No | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 1.20 (0.65, 2.23) | 1.46 (0.89, 2.41) |
| Previous breast biopsy | ||
| No | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 1.56 (0.63, 3.83) | 1.45 (0.71, 2.95) |
| General healthe | 0.99 (0.97, 1.01) | 0.99 (0.97, 1.01) |
| Health anxietyf | 0.99 (0.92, 1.07) | 1.01 (0.95, 1.07) |
| Health locus of controlg | ||
| No preference | Reference | Reference |
| Internal | 0.94 (0.31, 2.83) | 1.18 (0.49, 2.86) |
| Chance | 1.12 (0.39, 3.20) | 1.99 (0.87, 4.57) |
a Adjusted for age, education, first degree relative with breast cancer, benign breast disease, general health, breast cancer risk, and health anxiety; b Odds ratios in bold are significant with p < 0.05; c Age per 1 year increase; d FDR = first degree relative; e General health per one point increase; f Health anxiety per one point increase; g n = 11 people with a physician health locus of control were excluded due to small sample size
Explorative analyses of factors associated with preventive behaviours after breast cancer risk feedback with tailored prevention recommendations
| Characteristic | Started medication | Changed diet | Increased exercise | Limited alcohol intake |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-adjusteda | Multi-adjusteda | Multi-adjusteda | Multi-adjusteda | |
| ORb (95% CI) | ORb (95% CI) | ORb (95% CI) | ORb (95% CI) | |
| Self-reported breast cancer risk | ||||
| Low | n/a | 0.79f (0.29, 2.16) | 1.71 (0.80, 3.66) | 1.22f (0.54, 2.77) |
| Average | n/a | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Moderate | 0.89 (0.43, 1.85) | 1.26 (0.60, 2.64) | ||
| High | Reference | 1.44 (0.64, 3.24) | ||
| Ageg | 0.98 (0.92, 1.05) | 1.01 (0.96, 1.07) | 1.01 (0.95, 1.07) | |
| Education | ||||
| Lower | 0.61f (0.15, 2.41) | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Higher secondary | 2.05 (0.64, 6.62) | 1.42 (0.63, 3.22) | 1.08 (0.52, 2.23) | 1.14 (0.53, 2.49) |
| Higher vocational | Reference | 1.13 (0.50, 2.55) | 1.11 (0.55, 2.27) | 0.78 (0.36, 1.67) |
| BMIh | 0.98 (0.84, 1.14) | 0.99 (0.91, 1.08) | ||
| FDRc breast cancer | ||||
| No | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 0.42 (0.13, 1.37) | 1.11 (0.57, 2.13) | 1.70 (0.93, 3.11) | 1.05 (0.56, 1.98) |
| Benign breast disease | ||||
| No | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 0.83 (0.29, 2.37) | 0.88 (0.47, 1.64) | 0.75 (0.43, 1.30) | 1.02 (0.57, 1.83) |
| Previous breast biopsy | ||||
| No | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 1.76 (0.31, 9.89) | 1.31 (0.55, 3.16) | 0.90 (0.40, 2.00) | 2.01 (0.83, 4.91) |
| Co-morbidity | ||||
| 0–1 | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| ≥ 2 | 1.37 (0.48, 3.93) | 1.42 (0.75, 2.70) | 0.62 (0.35, 1.11) | 0.77 (0.42, 1.41) |
| General healthi | 1.00 (0.95, 1.04) | 1.00 (0.98, 1.02) | 0.99 (0.97, 1.01) | 1.00 (0.98, 1.03) |
| Life events | ||||
| 0–1 | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| ≥ 2 | 0.47 (0.15, 1.41) | 0.63 (0.32, 1.22) | 0.92 (0.52, 1.64) | 0.53 (0.27, 1.06) |
| Health anxietyj | 0.88 (0.77, 1.00) | 1.04 (0.97, 1.12) | 1.01 (0.94, 1.07) | 1.00 (0.94, 1.08) |
| Current medication used | ||||
| No | Reference | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Yes | 1.09 (0.38, 3.18) | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Beliefs about medicinese | ||||
| Harm | 0.92 (0.72, 1.17) | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Overuse | 0.89 (0.74, 1.06) | n/a | n/a | n/a |
a Adjusted for age, education, BMI, first degree relative with breast cancer, benign breast disease, general health, breast cancer risk, and health anxiety; b Odds ratios in bold are significant with p < 0.05; c FDR first degree relative; d Additionally adjusted for beliefs about medicines; e Additionally adjusted for current medication use; f Estimate based on a subgroup with fewer than 10 study participants; g Age per 1 year increase; h BMI per 1 point increase; i General health per one point increase; j Health anxiety per one point increase