When a gene mutation is identified in a research study following the death of the study participant, it is not clear whether such information should be made available to relatives. We report here an evaluation of the impact on relatives of being informed of study results that detected pathogenic BRCA2 mutations in a male relative, now deceased, who had early onset (under the age of 55) prostate cancer. The breast and ovarian cancer risk was unknown to the living relatives. Qualitative analysis of interviews with thirteen relatives indicated that those who had a higher risk perception, resulting from an awareness of cancer family history or experiential knowledge of cancer in their family, tended to adjust more easily to the results. All par...
Abstract The detection of a pathogenic variant in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene has medical and psychologi...
Background The genetic risk communication from proband to relatives varies from family to family, an...
There has been much discussion about what, if any, legal and moral duties professionals have to disc...
OBJECTIVES: This study explores communication within families of clinically significant genetics res...
Objectives: This study explores communication within families of clinically significant genetics res...
Background: Unclassified variant and uninformative BRCA1/2 results are not only relevant for proband...
Genetic testing for BRCA1/2 mutations associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer reveals s...
Genetic counseling for hereditary breast or colon cancer has implications for both counselees and th...
Published online: 29 September 2010The responsibility for informing at-risk relatives of the availab...
If a hereditary predisposition to colorectal cancer or breast cancer is diagnosed, most guidelines s...
If undetected, inherited cardiac conditions can lead to sudden cardiac death, while treatment option...
To systematically review and meta-synthesise primary qualitative research findings regarding family ...
Purpose: This study was designed to obtain current practices and opinions of genetic counselors sur...
Inconclusive genetic test results including screening recommendations for the breast cancer patients...
textabstractObjective of this paper is to study how DNA-test result information was communicated and...
Abstract The detection of a pathogenic variant in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene has medical and psychologi...
Background The genetic risk communication from proband to relatives varies from family to family, an...
There has been much discussion about what, if any, legal and moral duties professionals have to disc...
OBJECTIVES: This study explores communication within families of clinically significant genetics res...
Objectives: This study explores communication within families of clinically significant genetics res...
Background: Unclassified variant and uninformative BRCA1/2 results are not only relevant for proband...
Genetic testing for BRCA1/2 mutations associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer reveals s...
Genetic counseling for hereditary breast or colon cancer has implications for both counselees and th...
Published online: 29 September 2010The responsibility for informing at-risk relatives of the availab...
If a hereditary predisposition to colorectal cancer or breast cancer is diagnosed, most guidelines s...
If undetected, inherited cardiac conditions can lead to sudden cardiac death, while treatment option...
To systematically review and meta-synthesise primary qualitative research findings regarding family ...
Purpose: This study was designed to obtain current practices and opinions of genetic counselors sur...
Inconclusive genetic test results including screening recommendations for the breast cancer patients...
textabstractObjective of this paper is to study how DNA-test result information was communicated and...
Abstract The detection of a pathogenic variant in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene has medical and psychologi...
Background The genetic risk communication from proband to relatives varies from family to family, an...
There has been much discussion about what, if any, legal and moral duties professionals have to disc...