Abstract 22P
Background
To date, empirical methods using age, type of cancer and presence of family history of cancers are used clinically to identify individuals who may benefit from genetic counselling (GC) and testing, but because these guidelines use a threshold, they provide a standard recommendation regardless of whether women have a low (e.g. 4%) or high (e.g. 40%) likelihood of being BRCA carriers. We developed the Asian Genetic Risk Calculator (ARiCa), an Asian-specific personalised genetic risk assessment tool, to determine the probability of a breast cancer patient carrying a germline BRCA1/2 pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant. The ARiCa Study was established to evaluate the impact of personalised risk score on risk perception and cancer-related distress, and uptake of GC among breast cancer patients.
Methods
The ARiCa Study is a prospective observational multicentre two-arm study where 256 incident and prevalent breast cancer patients in breast surgical clinics who have previously not received GC will be randomised to receive genetic risk assessment based on current clinical criteria (controls) or ARiCa personalised risk score. The patients’ risk perception, distress level and GC uptake were determined via researcher-administered questionnaires six weeks after risk assessment.
Results
Interim analysis of 110 patients showed that compared to controls, a greater proportion of patients receiving ARiCa scores felt that the genetic risk information provided was easy to understand (92% vs 88%, p= 0.523) and influenced their decision on GC uptake (86% vs 78%, p=0.299). More participants also proceeded with GC (47% vs 39%, p=0.526) but none of the results were statistically significant. No significant distress after receiving genetic risk assessment was reported. Patients provided with personalized scores found that the visual (96%) and numerical (90%) forms of risk presentation were more helpful than the qualitative (84%) forms.
Conclusions
These interim results showed that personalized genetic risk assessment using visual and numerical forms of risk presentation is acceptable and may be a useful tool in facilitating the uptake of GC among breast cancer patients.
Clinical trial identification
NMRR ID-21-02298-7JY (IIR).
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Cancer Research Malaysia.
Funding
AstraZeneca.
Disclosure
C.H. Yip: Financial Interests, Personal, Advisory Board: AstraZeneca; Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: AstraZeneca. A.F. Abdul Aziz: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker: Roche; Non-Financial Interests, Personal, Member of Board of Directors, a non-governmental non-profit organsiations: National Cancer Society Malaysia; Non-Financial Interests, Personal, Other, Fellow: College of Surgeons, Academy of Medicine Malaysia; Non-Financial Interests, Personal, Member: Malaysian Oncological Society. W.K. Ho, B.H. Ang: Other, Institutional, Other, Pending ARiCa trademarking: Cancer Research Malaysia. S.Y. Yoon: Financial Interests, Personal, Invited Speaker, Honorarium as invited speaker: AstraZeneca. S. Teo: Financial Interests, Institutional, Research Grant, For ARiCa Study: AstraZeneca; Other, Institutional, Other, Pending ARiCa trademarking: Cancer Research Malaysia. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
40P - Intra-tumoral CD3, CD4, and CD8 as prognostic biomarkers in Asian breast cancer
Presenter: Jia Wern Pan
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
41P - Brown fat activation demonstrated on FDG PET/CT predicts survival outcome
Presenter: Sonya Park
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
42P - A promising anticancer drug for triple-negative breast cancer: OZ-001 suppresses tumor growth by dual targeting STAT3 and calcium signaling
Presenter: Jisun Kim
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
43P - Performance evaluation of a combined risk model for breast cancer risk prediction in Indonesian population (TRIP Study)
Presenter: Marco Wijaya
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
44P - Pathological complete response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and outcomes in Her-2 negative locally advanced breast cancer
Presenter: Amrith Patel
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
45P - Demographic determinants of pathological complete response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer
Presenter: Anvesh Dharanikota
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
46P - Predicting toxicity following cancer chemotherapy by detecting transporter gene ABCB1 (C1236T, G2677T/A, C3435CT) polymorphism in breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy with anthracycline and taxane either sequentially or concomitantly
Presenter: Tanuma Mistry
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
47P - Sequencing of chemotherapy and surgery among older triple-negative and HER2-positive breast cancer patients with comorbidities
Presenter: Anvesh Dharanikota
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
48P - The impact of preoperative axillary ultrasound on the false negative rate of sentinel lymph node biopsy in post neoadjuvant chemotherapy breast cancer patients
Presenter: Byshetty Rajendar
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract
49P - Survival outcomes of HER2-positive breast cancer patients treated with neoadjuvant therapy at a single cancer centre in India
Presenter: Minit Shah
Session: Poster Display
Resources:
Abstract