Abstract

BackgroundPersonal cancer risk assessments enable stratified care, for example, offering preventive surgical measures such as risk-reducing mastectomy (RRM) to women at high risk for breast cancer. In scenario-based experiments, we investigated whether different benefit–harm ratios of RRM influence women’s consideration of this, whether this consideration is influenced by women’s perception of and desire to know their personal cancer risk, or by their intention to take a novel cancer risk-predictive test, and whether consideration varies across different countries.MethodIn January 2017, 1,675 women 40 to 75 years of age from five European countries—Czech Republic, Germany, UK, Italy, and Sweden—took part in an online scenario-based experiment. Six different scenarios of hypothetical benefit–harm ratios of RRM were presented in accessible fact box formats: Baseline risk/risk reduction pairings were 20/16, 20/4, 10/8, 10/2, 5/4, and 5/1 out of 1,000 women dying from breast cancer.ResultsVarying the baseline risk of dying from breast cancer and the extent of risk reduction influenced the decision to consider RRM for 23% of women. Decisions varied by country, risk perception, and the intention to take a cancer risk-predictive test. Women who expressed a stronger intention to take such a test were more likely to consider having RRM. The desire to know one’s risk of developing any female cancer in general moderated women’s decisions, whereas the specific desire to know the risk of breast cancer did not.ConclusionsIn this hypothetical scenario-based study, only for a minority of women did the change in benefit–harm ratio inform their consideration of RRM. Because this consideration is influenced by risk perception and the intention to learn one’s cancer risks via a cancer risk-predictive test, careful disclosure of different potential preventive measures and their benefit–harm ratios is necessary before testing for individual risk. Furthermore, information on risk testing should acknowledge country-specific sensitivities for benefit–harm ratios.

Highlights

  • Genetic, epigenetic, lifestyle, and reproductive factors alone or combined can be used to predict a woman’s risk for developing breast cancer.[1,2,3] the average 10-year absolute risk of breast cancer in women in the UK aged 50 years is 2.85%, women at the lowest and highest percentile of the risk distribution have a 0.53% and 9.96% 10-year risk, respectively.[4]

  • In scenario-based experiments, we investigated whether different benefit– harm ratios of risk-reducing mastectomy (RRM) influence women’s consideration of this, whether this consideration is influenced by women’s perception of and desire to know their personal cancer risk, or by their intention to take a novel cancer risk-predictive test, and whether consideration varies across different countries

  • In this hypothetical scenario-based study, only for a minority of women did the change in benefit–harm ratio inform their consideration of RRM

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Summary

Introduction

Epigenetic, lifestyle, and reproductive factors alone or combined can be used to predict a woman’s risk for developing breast cancer.[1,2,3] the average 10-year absolute risk of breast cancer in women in the UK aged 50 years is 2.85%, women at the lowest and highest percentile of the risk distribution have a 0.53% and 9.96% 10-year risk, respectively.[4] Risk prediction can be used in each of these cases to enable risk-stratified early detection and risk-reducing preventive interventions.[5,6,7]. The FORECEE Consortium (Female Cancer Prediction Using Cervical Omics To Individualise Screening And Prevention; https://forecee.eu) aims to develop a risk-predictive test—for breast, cervical, endometrial, and ovarian cancer—in cervical epithelial cells, based on epigenetic markers.[8] Once identified, women at high risk of breast cancer could be offered riskreducing surgery. Personal cancer risk assessments enable stratified care, for example, offering preventive surgical measures such as risk-reducing mastectomy (RRM) to women at high risk for breast cancer. In scenario-based experiments, we investigated whether different benefit– harm ratios of RRM influence women’s consideration of this, whether this consideration is influenced by women’s perception of and desire to know their personal cancer risk, or by their intention to take a novel cancer risk-predictive test, and whether consideration varies across different countries.

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