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Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population

INTRODUCTION: There are widespread moves to develop risk-stratified approaches to population-based breast screening. The public needs to favour receiving breast cancer risk information, which ideally should produce no detrimental effects. This study investigates risk perception, the proportion wishi...

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Autores principales: Evans, D Gareth R, Donnelly, Louise S, Harkness, Elaine F, Astley, Susan M, Stavrinos, Paula, Dawe, Sarah, Watterson, Donna, Fox, Lynne, Sergeant, Jamie C, Ingham, Sarah, Harvie, Michelle N, Wilson, Mary, Beetles, Ursula, Buchan, Iain, Brentnall, Adam R, French, David P, Cuzick, Jack, Howell, Anthony
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4984905/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27022688
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.56
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author Evans, D Gareth R
Donnelly, Louise S
Harkness, Elaine F
Astley, Susan M
Stavrinos, Paula
Dawe, Sarah
Watterson, Donna
Fox, Lynne
Sergeant, Jamie C
Ingham, Sarah
Harvie, Michelle N
Wilson, Mary
Beetles, Ursula
Buchan, Iain
Brentnall, Adam R
French, David P
Cuzick, Jack
Howell, Anthony
author_facet Evans, D Gareth R
Donnelly, Louise S
Harkness, Elaine F
Astley, Susan M
Stavrinos, Paula
Dawe, Sarah
Watterson, Donna
Fox, Lynne
Sergeant, Jamie C
Ingham, Sarah
Harvie, Michelle N
Wilson, Mary
Beetles, Ursula
Buchan, Iain
Brentnall, Adam R
French, David P
Cuzick, Jack
Howell, Anthony
author_sort Evans, D Gareth R
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: There are widespread moves to develop risk-stratified approaches to population-based breast screening. The public needs to favour receiving breast cancer risk information, which ideally should produce no detrimental effects. This study investigates risk perception, the proportion wishing to know their 10-year risk and whether subsequent screening attendance is affected. METHODS: Fifty thousand women attending the NHS Breast Screening Programme completed a risk assessment questionnaire. Ten-year breast cancer risks were estimated using a validated algorithm (Tyrer-Cuzick) adjusted for visually assessed mammographic density. Women at high risk (⩾8%) and low risk (<1%) were invited for face-to-face or telephone risk feedback and counselling. RESULTS: Of those invited to receive risk feedback, more high-risk women, 500 out of 673 (74.3%), opted to receive a consultation than low-risk women, 106 out of 193 (54.9%) (P<0.001). Women at high risk were significantly more likely to perceive their risk as high (P<0.001) and to attend their subsequent mammogram (94.4%) compared with low-risk women (84.2% P=0.04) and all attendees (84.3% ⩽0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Population-based assessment of breast cancer risk is feasible. The majority of women wished to receive risk information. Perception of general population breast cancer risk is poor. There were no apparent adverse effects on screening attendance for high-risk women whose subsequent screening attendance was increased.
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spelling pubmed-49849052017-04-26 Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population Evans, D Gareth R Donnelly, Louise S Harkness, Elaine F Astley, Susan M Stavrinos, Paula Dawe, Sarah Watterson, Donna Fox, Lynne Sergeant, Jamie C Ingham, Sarah Harvie, Michelle N Wilson, Mary Beetles, Ursula Buchan, Iain Brentnall, Adam R French, David P Cuzick, Jack Howell, Anthony Br J Cancer Epidemiology INTRODUCTION: There are widespread moves to develop risk-stratified approaches to population-based breast screening. The public needs to favour receiving breast cancer risk information, which ideally should produce no detrimental effects. This study investigates risk perception, the proportion wishing to know their 10-year risk and whether subsequent screening attendance is affected. METHODS: Fifty thousand women attending the NHS Breast Screening Programme completed a risk assessment questionnaire. Ten-year breast cancer risks were estimated using a validated algorithm (Tyrer-Cuzick) adjusted for visually assessed mammographic density. Women at high risk (⩾8%) and low risk (<1%) were invited for face-to-face or telephone risk feedback and counselling. RESULTS: Of those invited to receive risk feedback, more high-risk women, 500 out of 673 (74.3%), opted to receive a consultation than low-risk women, 106 out of 193 (54.9%) (P<0.001). Women at high risk were significantly more likely to perceive their risk as high (P<0.001) and to attend their subsequent mammogram (94.4%) compared with low-risk women (84.2% P=0.04) and all attendees (84.3% ⩽0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Population-based assessment of breast cancer risk is feasible. The majority of women wished to receive risk information. Perception of general population breast cancer risk is poor. There were no apparent adverse effects on screening attendance for high-risk women whose subsequent screening attendance was increased. Nature Publishing Group 2016-04-26 2016-03-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4984905/ /pubmed/27022688 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.56 Text en Copyright © 2016 Cancer Research UK http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ From twelve months after its original publication, this work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 4.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
spellingShingle Epidemiology
Evans, D Gareth R
Donnelly, Louise S
Harkness, Elaine F
Astley, Susan M
Stavrinos, Paula
Dawe, Sarah
Watterson, Donna
Fox, Lynne
Sergeant, Jamie C
Ingham, Sarah
Harvie, Michelle N
Wilson, Mary
Beetles, Ursula
Buchan, Iain
Brentnall, Adam R
French, David P
Cuzick, Jack
Howell, Anthony
Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population
title Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population
title_full Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population
title_fullStr Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population
title_full_unstemmed Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population
title_short Breast cancer risk feedback to women in the UK NHS breast screening population
title_sort breast cancer risk feedback to women in the uk nhs breast screening population
topic Epidemiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4984905/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27022688
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.56
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