Abstract

Lynch syndrome (LS) is the most common inherited cause of colorectal and endometrial cancers. Identifying individuals at risk for LS without personal cancer history requires detailed collection and assessment of family health history. However, barriers exist to family health history collection, especially in historically underserved populations. To improve LS risk assessment in historically underserved populations, we adapted the provider-facing PREdiction Model for gene Mutations (PREMM5™ model), a validated LS risk assessment model, into a patient-facing electronic application through an iterative development process involving expert and patient stakeholders. We report on preliminary findings based on the first 500 individuals exposed to the adapted application in a primary care population enriched for low-literacy and low-resource patients. Major adaptations to the PREMM5™ provider module included reduction in reading level, addition of interactive literacy aids, incorporation of family history assessment for both maternal and paternal sides of the family, and inclusion of questions about individual relatives or small groups of relatives to reduce cognitive burden. In the first 500 individuals, 90% completed the PREMM5™ independently; of those, 94% did so in 5 min or less (ranged from 0.2 to 48.8 min). The patient-facing application was able to accurately classify 84% of patients as having clinically significant or not clinically significant LS risk. Our preliminary results suggest that in this diverse study population, most participants were able to rapidly, accurately, and independently complete an interactive application collecting family health history assessment that accurately assessed for Lynch syndrome risk.

Highlights

  • Lynch syndrome (LS) is the most common hereditary cause of colorectal cancer (CRC), accounting for about 2–3% of all CRC [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The Patient Advisory Councils (PACs) suggested that an explanation of LS be added to the results page (Supplementary Figure 3) and that the study recommend genetic testing if the participant had a clinically-significant risk

  • Our preliminary results show that in our diverse population of study participants, most appear to be able to independently complete an interactive application collecting family health history pertaining to LS risk

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Summary

Introduction

Lynch syndrome (LS) is the most common hereditary cause of colorectal cancer (CRC), accounting for about 2–3% of all CRC [1,2,3,4,5]. Individuals with LS have increased lifetime risk of colorectal and endometrial cancers and increased risk for other malignancies such as stomach, small bowel, pancreas, ovarian, brain and urinary tract cancers [6]. Despite this increased risk, early identification of patients with LS allows for regular surveillance and risk-reduction procedures that can lead to decreased cancer incidence and mortality [6, 7].

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