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Men's decision-making about predictive BRCA1/2 testing: the role of family

Men's decision-making about predictive BRCA1/2 testing: the role of family
Men's decision-making about predictive BRCA1/2 testing: the role of family
Men who have a family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer may be offered a predictive genetic test to determine whether or not they carry the family specific BRCA1/2 mutation. Male carriers may be at increased risk of breast and prostate cancers. Relatively little is known about at-risk men’s decision-making about BRCA1/2 testing. This qualitative study explores the influences on male patients’ genetic test decisions. Twenty-nine in-depth interviews were undertaken with both carrier and noncarrier men and immediate family members (17 male patients, 8 female partners, and 4 adult children). These explored family members’ experiences of cancer and genetic testing, decision-making about testing, family support, communication of test results within the family, risk perception and risk management. Implicit influences on men’s testing decisions such as familial obligations are examined. The extent to which other family members—partners and adult children—were involved in testing decisions is also described. It is demonstrated that mothers of potential mutation carriers not only perceive themselves as having a right to be involved in making this decision, but also were perceived by their male partners as having a legitimate role to play in decision-making. There was evidence that (adult) children were excluded from the decision-making, and some expressed resentment about this. The implications of these findings for the practice of genetic counseling are discussed.
BRCA1/2 testing, men, family, decision-making
1059-7700
207-217
Hallowell, N.
46e75a41-5a17-4e2c-8bc7-d321902d655d
Ardern-Jones, A.
615ce40c-596a-4b29-9578-13bf644aa3e0
Eeles, R.
c7ae2359-6f49-4f42-88f8-a241570f9d4f
Foster, C.
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73
Lucassen, A.
ff9a15b3-3c3a-4538-bc8e-b0099b8b382d
Moynihan, C.
be73d33e-3235-4079-b01e-472d7a44740a
Watson, M.
168c5230-279a-4c51-9065-eefcd18191fa
Hallowell, N.
46e75a41-5a17-4e2c-8bc7-d321902d655d
Ardern-Jones, A.
615ce40c-596a-4b29-9578-13bf644aa3e0
Eeles, R.
c7ae2359-6f49-4f42-88f8-a241570f9d4f
Foster, C.
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73
Lucassen, A.
ff9a15b3-3c3a-4538-bc8e-b0099b8b382d
Moynihan, C.
be73d33e-3235-4079-b01e-472d7a44740a
Watson, M.
168c5230-279a-4c51-9065-eefcd18191fa

Hallowell, N., Ardern-Jones, A., Eeles, R., Foster, C., Lucassen, A., Moynihan, C. and Watson, M. (2005) Men's decision-making about predictive BRCA1/2 testing: the role of family. Journal of Genetic Counseling, 14 (3), 207-217. (doi:10.1007/s10897-005-0384-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Men who have a family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer may be offered a predictive genetic test to determine whether or not they carry the family specific BRCA1/2 mutation. Male carriers may be at increased risk of breast and prostate cancers. Relatively little is known about at-risk men’s decision-making about BRCA1/2 testing. This qualitative study explores the influences on male patients’ genetic test decisions. Twenty-nine in-depth interviews were undertaken with both carrier and noncarrier men and immediate family members (17 male patients, 8 female partners, and 4 adult children). These explored family members’ experiences of cancer and genetic testing, decision-making about testing, family support, communication of test results within the family, risk perception and risk management. Implicit influences on men’s testing decisions such as familial obligations are examined. The extent to which other family members—partners and adult children—were involved in testing decisions is also described. It is demonstrated that mothers of potential mutation carriers not only perceive themselves as having a right to be involved in making this decision, but also were perceived by their male partners as having a legitimate role to play in decision-making. There was evidence that (adult) children were excluded from the decision-making, and some expressed resentment about this. The implications of these findings for the practice of genetic counseling are discussed.

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Published date: June 2005
Keywords: BRCA1/2 testing, men, family, decision-making
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences, Cancer Sciences, Nursing & Midwifery

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 18660
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/18660
ISSN: 1059-7700
PURE UUID: 702efd42-e622-4eca-9a06-fcb54041fb51
ORCID for C. Foster: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4703-8378

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Dec 2005
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:41

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Contributors

Author: N. Hallowell
Author: A. Ardern-Jones
Author: R. Eeles
Author: C. Foster ORCID iD
Author: A. Lucassen
Author: C. Moynihan
Author: M. Watson

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