Investigator

Miki Watanabe

Aichi University of Education, Department of School Health Sciences

Research Interests

MWMiki Watanabe
Papers(1)
Does Direct-to-Consum…
Collaborators(1)
Sadao Suzuki
Institutions(1)
Nagoya City University

Papers

Does Direct-to-Consumer Personal Genetic Testing Improve Gynecological Cancer Screening Uptake among Never-Screened Attendees? A Randomized Controlled Study

The clinical impact of direct-to-consumer genetic testing (DTC-GT) on health behavior change has remained controversial. The aim of this study is to clarify the short-term effects of DTC-GT on gynecological cancer screening uptake among middle-aged never-screened Japanese women in a randomized controlled trial (RCT). A total of 144 women aged 45–50 who had never undergone gynecological cancer screening were randomly selected to receive health education (control group), or health education and DTC-GT (intervention group), at a 1:1 ratio. We compared the gynecological screening uptake during the follow-up period. Furthermore, to estimate the impact of learning of an elevated genetic cancer risk in the intervention group, we conducted an analysis dichotomized by genetic risk category. A total of 139 women completed the one-year follow-up survey (69 in the control group and 70 in the intervention group). The follow-up period did not differ between control and intervention groups (the median follow-up period was 276 days and 279 days, respectively, p = 0.746). There were 7 (9.7%) women in the control group and 10 (13.9%) in the intervention group who attended breast cancer screening (p = 0.606), and 9 (12.5%) women from both groups attended cervical cancer screening (p = 1.000). Likewise, there were no significant differences in cancer screening uptake in the analysis stratified by risk category within the intervention group. In conclusion, there was no significant effect of DTC-GT on gynecological cancer screening uptake in this RCT setting. Increasing cancer screening attendance may require a combination of well-established intervention strategies and DTC-GT. Clinical Trial Registration: UMIN-CTR Identifier, UMIN000031709.

79Works
1Papers
1Collaborators
Early Detection of CancerAntigens, NeoplasmDNA, NeoplasmGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseHelicobacter InfectionsNeoplasm Proteins

Positions

2022–

Researcher

Aichi University of Education · Department of School Health Sciences

2017–

Researcher

Nagoya City University Graduate School of Medical Sciences · Department of Public Health

2004–

Researcher

Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute · Department of Epidemiology and Prevention

Links & IDs
0000-0003-0222-9629

Scopus: 35321620500