Litcius/Paper detail

Preferences for a polygenic test to estimate cancer risk in a general Australian population

Brent Venning, Sibel Saya, Richard De Abreu Lourenço, Deborah J. Street, Jon Emery

2022Genetics in Medicine15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: There is significant interest in the use of polygenic risk score (PRS) tests to improve cancer risk assessment and stratified prevention. Our current understanding of preferences regarding different aspects of this novel testing approach is limited. This study examined which attributes of a PRS test most influence the likelihood of testing. METHODS: A discrete choice experiment was developed to elicit preferences for different aspects of a PRS test by surveying an online sample of the Australian population. Preferences were assessed using mixed logistic regression, latent class analysis, and marginal willingness to pay. RESULTS: The 1002 surveyed respondents were more likely to choose a PRS test that was more accurate, tested for multiple cancer types, and enabled cancer risk reduction through lifestyle modification, screening, or medication. There was also a preference for testing through a primary care physician rather than online or through a genetic specialist. A test that did not impact life insurance eligibility or premiums was preferred over the one that did. CONCLUSION: This study found that the Australian population prefer a PRS test that is highly accurate, tests for multiple cancers, has noninvasive risk reduction measures, and is performed through primary care.

Topics & Concepts

Test (biology)MedicineLogistic regressionPopulationLatent class modelPreferenceRisk assessmentPolygenic risk scoreCancerFamily medicineDemographyEnvironmental healthStatisticsInternal medicineComputer scienceSociologyMathematicsGenotypeComputer securityChemistryBiochemistryBiologySingle-nucleotide polymorphismGenePaleontologyBRCA gene mutations in cancerColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life