Investigator

Carolina Hawranek

Research Coordinator, Child Oncology Trials · Region Västerbotten, Pediatric and Hematology Clinic, University Hospital of Umeå

CHCarolina Hawranek
Papers(1)
Direct letters to rel…
Collaborators(3)
Hans EhrencronaAnna ÖfverholmAnna Rosén
Institutions(3)
Ume UniversitySkåne University Hosp…University Of Gothenb…

Papers

Direct letters to relatives at risk of hereditary cancer—a randomised trial on healthcare-assisted versus family-mediated risk disclosure

Abstract Observational studies suggest that direct contact from healthcare to at-risk relatives may increase genetic counselling (GC) uptake as compared to family-mediated risk disclosure, but randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are lacking. This study assessed whether the offer of direct letters to relatives at risk of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC) or Lynch syndrome increases GC uptake compared to family-mediated communication alone. Between 2020 and 2023, probands were randomly assigned to family-mediated disclosure (control) or family-mediated disclosure plus the offer of sending direct letters to at-risk relatives (intervention). The primary outcome was GC uptake within 12 months, measured as the proportion of eligible relatives at risk contacting a Swedish cancer genetics clinic. In total, 165 families (median: 4 eligible relatives, range: 1–26) were randomised to control (n = 79) or intervention (n = 86). GC uptake was 67% in controls and 71% in the intervention group (P = 0.23). After adjusting for predefined variables and covariates, there was still no significant difference between groups (OR: 1.24, CI: 0.79–1.95, P = 0.34). Distant relatives had lower uptake than first-degree relatives (OR: 0.27, CI: 0.18–0.40, P < 0.001), while female relatives had higher uptake than males (OR: 2.17, CI: 1.50–3.12, P < 0.001). This is the largest RCT so far investigating direct letters to relatives. GC uptake was high in both groups, and the intervention of direct letters did not show superiority over family-mediated communication alone. Direct letters to relatives may complement family-mediated disclosure in certain situations, but should not be implemented as a general procedure in cancer genetics practices.

7Works
1Papers
3Collaborators
Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary NonpolyposisHereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Syndrome

Positions

2023–

Research Coordinator, Child Oncology Trials

Region Västerbotten · Pediatric and Hematology Clinic, University Hospital of Umeå

2019–

PhD

Umeå University · Department of Radiation Sciences

Education

2006

Master of Science - Biomedical Science

Lund University · Medical Faculty

Country

SE

Keywords
oncologyhereditary cancerrisk communicationscancer risk disclosurepediatric oncologyhealth communications