Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis

Abstract Background The impact of timing of genetic testing on surgical decision making in women with breast cancer and BRCA mutation is not well known. Methods Women who were found to carry a deleterious BRCA mutation and had been diagnosed with breast cancer were identified from a database at Beau...

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Main Authors: Siddhartha Yadav, Ashley Reeves, Sarah Campian, Amy Sufka, Dana Zakalik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-07-01
Series:Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13053-017-0071-z
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spelling doaj-bfb9195928b64f84bfe7bef06950f6572020-11-24T20:43:30ZengBMCHereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice1897-42872017-07-011511810.1186/s13053-017-0071-zPreoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysisSiddhartha Yadav0Ashley Reeves1Sarah Campian2Amy Sufka3Dana Zakalik4Department of Internal Medicine, Beaumont HealthNancy and James Grosfeld Cancer Genetics Center, Beaumont Cancer Institute, Beaumont HealthNancy and James Grosfeld Cancer Genetics Center, Beaumont Cancer Institute, Beaumont HealthNancy and James Grosfeld Cancer Genetics Center, Beaumont Cancer Institute, Beaumont HealthNancy and James Grosfeld Cancer Genetics Center, Beaumont Cancer Institute, Beaumont HealthAbstract Background The impact of timing of genetic testing on surgical decision making in women with breast cancer and BRCA mutation is not well known. Methods Women who were found to carry a deleterious BRCA mutation and had been diagnosed with breast cancer were identified from a database at Beaumont Health. Women who had received BRCA positive results at least a day prior to their index surgery were considered to be aware of their mutation status prior to surgery. Baseline characteristics and surgical choices were compared between women who were aware of their mutation status prior to surgery and those who were not. Fischer’s exact test was used for categorical variables and Mann–Whitney U-Test was used for continuous variables. Results A total of 220 patients were included in the final analysis, 208 (94.5%) with unilateral breast cancer and 12 (5.5%) with bilateral breast cancer. Out of the 208 patients with unilateral breast cancer, 106 (51.0%) patients were aware of their mutation status prior to index surgery while 102 (49%) were not. A significantly (p < 0.05) higher proportion of women underwent contralateral prophylactic mastectomy in the group that was aware of their mutation status prior to index surgery compared to the group that was not (76.4% vs 14.7%). Conclusions Our study demonstrates that knowledge of BRCA mutation status impacts surgical decision making in favor of bilateral mastectomy in patients who are aware of their results prior to index surgery. This finding supports the practice of preoperative genetic testing in patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13053-017-0071-zBRCAMastectomySurgical decisionSurgeryTiming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Siddhartha Yadav
Ashley Reeves
Sarah Campian
Amy Sufka
Dana Zakalik
spellingShingle Siddhartha Yadav
Ashley Reeves
Sarah Campian
Amy Sufka
Dana Zakalik
Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
BRCA
Mastectomy
Surgical decision
Surgery
Timing
author_facet Siddhartha Yadav
Ashley Reeves
Sarah Campian
Amy Sufka
Dana Zakalik
author_sort Siddhartha Yadav
title Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
title_short Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
title_full Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
title_fullStr Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
title_full_unstemmed Preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in BRCA mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
title_sort preoperative genetic testing impacts surgical decision making in brca mutation carriers with breast cancer: a retrospective cohort analysis
publisher BMC
series Hereditary Cancer in Clinical Practice
issn 1897-4287
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Background The impact of timing of genetic testing on surgical decision making in women with breast cancer and BRCA mutation is not well known. Methods Women who were found to carry a deleterious BRCA mutation and had been diagnosed with breast cancer were identified from a database at Beaumont Health. Women who had received BRCA positive results at least a day prior to their index surgery were considered to be aware of their mutation status prior to surgery. Baseline characteristics and surgical choices were compared between women who were aware of their mutation status prior to surgery and those who were not. Fischer’s exact test was used for categorical variables and Mann–Whitney U-Test was used for continuous variables. Results A total of 220 patients were included in the final analysis, 208 (94.5%) with unilateral breast cancer and 12 (5.5%) with bilateral breast cancer. Out of the 208 patients with unilateral breast cancer, 106 (51.0%) patients were aware of their mutation status prior to index surgery while 102 (49%) were not. A significantly (p < 0.05) higher proportion of women underwent contralateral prophylactic mastectomy in the group that was aware of their mutation status prior to index surgery compared to the group that was not (76.4% vs 14.7%). Conclusions Our study demonstrates that knowledge of BRCA mutation status impacts surgical decision making in favor of bilateral mastectomy in patients who are aware of their results prior to index surgery. This finding supports the practice of preoperative genetic testing in patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer.
topic BRCA
Mastectomy
Surgical decision
Surgery
Timing
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13053-017-0071-z
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