Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03470402

Decision Support for BRCA Testing in Ethnically Diverse Women

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
276 (actual)
Sponsor
Columbia University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
21 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The objective of this study is to expand genetic testing for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome to a broader population of high-risk women by prompting appropriate referrals from the primary care setting with the use of an electronic health record-embedded breast cancer risk navigation (BNAV) tool. To address patient-related barriers to genetic testing, the investigators developed a web-based decision aid, RealRisks, which is designed to improve genetic testing knowledge, accuracy of breast cancer risk perceptions, and self-efficacy to engage in a collaborative dialogue about genetic testing. The study design is a randomized controlled trial of patient educational materials and provider electronic health record (EHR) notice alone (control arm) or in combination with RealRisks and BNAV (intervention arm). The investigators hypothesize that combining the patient-centered RealRisks with the provider-centered BNAV will increase appropriate uptake of genetic counseling. The investigators also hypothesize that genetic counseling decisions will be more informed, and result in less decision conflict and improved shared decision making.

Detailed description

Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome (HBOC) is an inherited condition that is most commonly associated with mutations in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. Mutation carriers have lifetime risks of breast and ovarian cancer of 60-80% and 20-40%, respectively. Risk management options include intensive breast cancer screening, risk-reducing surgeries, and chemoprevention, which have been shown to improve early detection and reduce cancer incidence and mortality. In particular, prophylactic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy has been associated with a 60-77%reduction in all-cause mortality among BRCA mutation carriers. Based upon U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines, an estimated 5%-10% of women unaffected with breast cancer are eligible for genetic testing for HBOC, but only 14% of those eligible were referred and 4% had BRCA genetic testing. Many women may be unaware of their high-risk status due to our inability to adequately screen them in the primary care setting. Other reasons for low uptake include inadequate time for counseling and insufficient knowledge about risk-reducing strategies. Women from racial/ethnic minorities are less likely to seek genetic testing for HBOC, contributing to poorer clinical outcomes in these populations compared to non-Hispanic whites. Alternatively, decreasing inappropriate genetics referrals is also important for reducing anxiety and allowing genetic services to be used more efficiently. More research is needed to develop optimal strategies for engaging high-risk women in informed decision-making about genetic testing for HBOC. The objective of this study is to expand genetic testing for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome to a broader population of high-risk women by prompting appropriate referrals from the primary care setting with the use of an electronic health record-embedded breast cancer risk navigation (BNAV) tool. To address patient-related barriers to genetic testing, the investigators developed a web-based decision aid, RealRisks, which is designed to improve genetic testing knowledge, accuracy of breast cancer risk perceptions, and self-efficacy to engage in a collaborative dialogue about genetic testing. The study design is a randomized controlled trial of patient educational materials and provider EHR notice alone (control arm) or in combination with RealRisks and BNAV (intervention arm). The investigators hypothesize that combining the patient-centered RealRisks with the provider-centered BNAV will increase appropriate uptake of genetic counseling. The investigators also hypothesize that genetic counseling decisions will be more informed, and result in less decision conflict and improved shared decision making.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERRealRisksRealRisks is a web-based patient decision aid with modules on risk assessment, family history and breast cancer, genetic testing, and prevention options. Participants enter family history data into RealRisks, and RealRisks calculates 5-year breast cancer risk, lifetime breast cancer risk, and the probability of carrying a BRCA mutation. This information is then interactively presented to the participant. RealRisks facilitates the participant in identifying their intention to undergo BRCA genetic testing and the factors that are important to the participant in making this decision. RealRisks produces a summary of all of this information that the participant can print and take with her to a health care appointment.
OTHERBNAVBNAV is a web-based decision support tool for healthcare providers with educational modules on genetic testing, chemoprevention, patient-centered care, and screening. BNAV also provides providers with a table outlining their enrolled patients' breast cancer risk, eligibility for genetic testing, and stated preferences.
OTHERiNYPEnrolled patients will have their eligibility for BRCA genetic testing flagged in iNYP, the hospital's portal for visualizing EHR data (standard practice).
OTHERStandard Educational MaterialEnrolled patient participants will be sent standard educational brochures on genes and breast cancer and the CUMC breast cancer prevention clinic
OTHERHigh-Risk MessageEnrolled patient participants will receive a letter that informs them that they meet eligibility criteria for BRCA genetic testing, outlines prevention options, and recommends discussing genetic counseling referral with their health care provider (standard practice).

Timeline

Start date
2017-12-13
Primary completion
2020-08-17
Completion
2020-08-17
First posted
2018-03-20
Last updated
2021-04-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03470402. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.