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Do people with hereditary cancer syndromes inform their at-risk relatives? A systematic review and meta-analysis

Muhammad Danyal Ahsan, Sarah R. Levi, Emily Webster, Hannah Bergeron, Jenny Lin, Priyanka Narayan, Becky Baltich Nelson, Xuan Li, Rana K. Fowlkes, Jesse Brewer, Charlene Thomas, Paul J. Christos, Eloise Chapman‐Davis, Evelyn Cantillo, Kevin Holcomb, Ravi Sharaf, Melissa K. Frey

2023PEC Innovation37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate rates of familial disclosure of hereditary cancer syndrome information. Methods: A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted in accordance with PRISMA guidelines (PROSPERO no.: CRD42020134276). Key electronic databases were searched to identify studies evaluating hereditary cancer syndrome cascade relative disclosure. Eligible studies were subjected to meta-analysis. Results: Thirty-four studies met inclusion criteria. Among 11,711 included relatives, 70% (95% CI 60 - 78%) were informed of their risk of carrying a cancer-associated pathogenic variant; of 2,875 relatives informed of their risk who were evaluated for uptake of cascade testing, 43% (95% CI 27 - 61%) completed testing. Rates of disclosure were higher among female vs male relatives (79% [95% CI 73% - 84%] vs 67% [95% CI 57% - 75%]) and first-degree vs second-degree relatives (83% [95% CI 77% - 88%] vs 58% [95% CI 45 - 69%]). Conclusion: Nearly one-third of at-risk relatives remain uninformed of their risk of carrying a cancer-associated pathogenic variant. Even among those informed, fewer than half subsequently complete genetic testing, representing a critical missed opportunity for precision cancer prevention. Innovation: Five studies evaluating interventions to improve disclosure rates were generally ineffective. Urgent work is needed to elucidate barriers to relative disclosure by probands to develop targeted interventions that can optimize proband-mediated cascade genetic testing rates.

Topics & Concepts

ProbandMedicineMeta-analysisPsychological interventionGenetic testingRelative riskCancerSystematic reviewHereditary CancerFamily medicineInternal medicineMEDLINEConfidence intervalBreast cancerPsychiatryGeneticsMutationLawPolitical scienceBiologyGeneBRCA gene mutations in cancerGenomics and Rare DiseasesGenetic Associations and Epidemiology
Do people with hereditary cancer syndromes inform their at-risk relatives? A systematic review and meta-analysis | Litcius