4.6 Article

UK Women's Views of the Concepts of Personalised Breast Cancer Risk Assessment and Risk-Stratified Breast Screening: A Qualitative Interview Study

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 13, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers13225813

Keywords

breast screening; mammography; breast cancer; risk stratification; personal risk; risk assessment; acceptability; screening preferences; overdiagnosis; screening harms

Categories

Funding

  1. Breast Cancer Now [2018BCNNovPhD12651]
  2. Cancer Research UK Career Development Fellowship [C7492/A17219]

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The study found that some UK women are open to both high and low-risk screening options, while others resist the idea of reducing low-risk screening frequency. Women who are already sceptical about breast screening are less influenced by the concept of risk-based screening. Communication challenges may be faced in promoting this screening model, highlighting the need for tailored support and advice.
Simple Summary: Risk-based breast screening will involve tailoring the amount of screening to women's level of risk. Therefore, women at high-risk may be offered more frequent screening and over a longer period of time than those at low risk for whom less screening may be recommended. As this will involve considerable changes to the NHS Breast Screening Programme, it is important to explore what women in the UK think and feel about this approach. Analysis of in-depth interviews revealed that some women would find both high and low-risk screening options acceptable whereas others were resistant to the prospect of reduced screening if they were assessed as low-risk. We also found that the idea of risk-based screening had little influence on the attitudes of women who were already sceptical about breast screening. These findings highlight the communication challenges that will be faced by those introducing risk-based screening and suggest a need for tailored support and advice. Any introduction of risk-stratification within the NHS Breast Screening Programme needs to be considered acceptable by women. We conducted interviews to explore women's attitudes to personalised risk assessment and risk-stratified breast screening. Twenty-five UK women were purposively sampled by screening experience and socioeconomic background. Interview transcripts were qualitatively analysed using Framework Analysis. Women expressed positive intentions for personal risk assessment and willingness to receive risk feedback to provide reassurance and certainty. Women responded to risk-stratified screening scenarios in three ways: 'Overall acceptors' considered both high- and low-risk options acceptable as a reasonable allocation of resources to clinical need, yet acceptability was subject to specified conditions including accuracy of risk estimates and availability of support throughout the screening pathway. Others who thought 'more is better' only supported high-risk scenarios where increased screening was proposed. 'Screening sceptics' found low-risk scenarios more aligned to their screening values than high-risk screening options. Consideration of screening recommendations for other risk groups had more influence on women's responses than screening-related harms. These findings demonstrate high, but not universal, acceptability. Support and guidance, tailored to screening values and preferences, may be required by women at all levels of risk.

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