Breast Cancer (BRCA) Gene TestBRCA (Breast Cancer) Gene Test What To Think AboutThere are several important things to think about when you are
making the decision to have a BRCA gene test. - Genetic
counseling before and after a BRCA test will help you understand the
benefits, risks, and possible outcomes of testing. A BRCA test gives you the
chance to make informed medical and lifestyle decisions. For more information,
see the topic
Breast Cancer Genetic Test. However, information about
having gene changes could affect your employment or your health, life, and
disability insurance. To find doctors who do gene tests and counseling, call
the cancer information service at the National Cancer Institute at
1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237). To find a genetic counselor near you, contact
the National Society of Genetic Counselors at (312) 321-6834 or visit their Web
site at www.nsgc.org.
- About 5% to 10% of
all breast and ovarian cancers are linked to the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene
change.3 If you test positive for one of these
changes, your lifetime chance of breast cancer is 36% to 85% and your chance
for ovarian cancer is 16% to 60%.1 These numbers show
a wide range of chance and depend on other personal and family
history.
- If you have a strong family history of breast cancer, a
negative BRCA result does not mean that you will not develop breast cancer.
BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene changes do cause a higher chance of breast cancer, but
other gene changes are possible and may cause cancer.
- If you have a
family member with breast cancer, think about asking the family member to be
tested for a gene change before you have a test. If your family member's BRCA
tests results are negative, it usually is not helpful to test the rest of the
family.
- Genetic tests can be very expensive (costing hundreds to
thousands of dollars) and may not be covered by your health insurance.
- The
United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) does not recommend
regular BRCA testing for women who do not have family risk factors.2
- For women from families that do not have risk
factors for BRCA changes, a genetic test is not likely to give any useful
information about their chance of developing breast cancer. Women from low-risk
families rarely have a positive test. A BRCA gene test is not recommended for a
person without risk factors, because the test can give a
false-positive test result.
Should I have a gene test for breast and
ovarian cancer? What should I do if I'm at high risk for
breast cancer?
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