Journal article
Women's preferences for contralateral prophylactic mastectomy following unilateral breast cancer: What risk-reduction makes it worthwhile?
S Tesson, I Richards, D Porter, KA Phillips, N Rankin, D Costa, T Musiello, M Marven, P Butow
Breast | CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE | Published : 2017
Abstract
Objectives Contralateral prophylactic mastectomy (CPM) reduces the risk of contralateral breast cancer (BC) following unilateral BC, but may not increase survival in BRCA1/2 mutation negative women. Despite this, and the risk for adverse physical and psychological impact, uptake is increasing in BRCA1/2 mutation negative women. We aimed to quantify the degree of reduction in lifetime contralateral BC risk women required to justify CPM, and to explore demographic, disease and psychosocial predictors of preferences using Protection Motivation Theory (PMT) as a theoretical framework. Reasoning behind preferences was also examined. Materials and methods 388 women previously diagnosed with unilat..
View full abstractRelated Projects (3)
Grants
Awarded by University of Sydney Human Research Ethics Committee
Awarded by National Breast Cancer Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
Ethics approval was granted by the University of Sydney Human Research Ethics Committee (Project Number: 2014/437).