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The psychosocial impact of prostate cancer screening for BRCA1 and BRCA2 carriers.

Elizabeth K Bancroft ,
Elizabeth C Page ,
Mark N Brook ,
Jennifer Pope ,
Sarah Thomas ,
Kathryn Myhill ,
Brian T Helfand ,
Pooja Talaty ,
Kai-Ren Ong ,
Emma Douglas ,
Jackie Cook ,
Derek J Rosario ,
Monica Salinas ,
Saundra S Buys ,
Jo Anson ,
Rosemarie Davidson ,
Mark Longmuir ,
Lucy Side ,
Diana M Eccles ,
Marc Tischkowitz ,
Amy Taylor ,
Mara Cruellas ,
Eduard Perez Ballestero ,
Ruth Cleaver ,
Mohini Varughese ,
Julian Barwell ,
Mandy LeButt ,
Lynn Greenhalgh ,
Rachel Hart ,
Ashraf Azzabi ,
Irene Jobson ,
Lynn Cogley ,
D Gareth Evans ,
Jeanette Rothwell ,
Natalie Taylor ,
Matthew Hogben ,
Sibel Saya ,
,
Rosalind A Eeles ,
Neil K Aaronson

Abstract

SUBJECTS AND METHODS

Participants enrolled in the IMPACT study were invited to complete a psychosocial questionnaire prior to each annual screening visit for a minimum of 5 years. The questionnaire included questions on sociodemographics and the following measures: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Impact of Event Scale, 36-item Short-Form Health Survey, Memorial Anxiety Scale for PrCa, Cancer Worry Scale, risk perception and knowledge.

CONCLUSION

This is the first study to report the longitudinal psychosocial impact of a targeted PrCa screening programme for BRCA1 and BRCA2 carriers. The results reassure that an annual PSA-based screening programme does not have an adverse impact on psychosocial health or health-related quality of life in these higher-risk individuals. These results are important as more PrCa screening is targeted to higher-risk groups.

RESULTS

A total of 760 participants completed questionnaires: 207 participants with GPV in BRCA1, 265 with GPV in BRCA2 and 288 controls (non-carriers from families with a known GPV). We found no evidence of clinically concerning levels of general or cancer-specific distress or poor health-related quality of life in the cohort as a whole. Individuals in the control group had significantly less worry about PrCa compared with the carriers; however, all mean scores were low and within reported general population norms, where available. BRCA2 carriers with previously high prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels experience a small but significant increase in PrCa anxiety (P = 0.01) and PSA-specific anxiety (P < 0.001). Cancer risk perceptions reflected information provided during genetic counselling and participants had good levels of knowledge, although this declined over time.

OBJECTIVES

To report the long-term outcomes from a longitudinal psychosocial study that forms part of the 'Identification of Men with a genetic predisposition to ProstAte Cancer: Targeted Screening in men at higher genetic risk and controls' (IMPACT) study. The IMPACT study is a multi-national study of targeted prostate cancer (PrCa) screening in individuals with a known germline pathogenic variant (GPV) in either the BReast CAncer gene 1 (BRCA1) or the BReast CAncer gene 2 (BRCA2).

More about this publication

BJU international

Volume 134
Issue nr. 3
Pages 484-500
Publication date 01-09-2024

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1111/bju.16432
Europe PubMed Central 38839570
Pubmed 38839570

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