LIG Audit Status
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Batch audit-20260421-labels-seed42 · created 2026-04-21 07:03 · seed 42
caucasian
25 reviewed / 25 total
0 pending
Confirmed caucasian 25 · Not caucasian on review 0
white
25 reviewed / 25 total
0 pending
Confirmed white 24 · Not white on review 1
european
10 reviewed / 25 total
15 pending
Confirmed european 10 · Not european on review 0
other
25 reviewed / 25 total
0 pending
Confirmed other 25 · Not other on review 0
none of these labels
0 reviewed / 100 total
100 pending
Confirmed none of these labels 0 · Uses tracked labels on review 0
["The big reveal: Family disclosure patterns of <i>BRCA</i> genetic test results among young Black women with invasive breast cancer"]
Journal of Genetic Counseling · 2020 · article 49135014 · 10.1002/jgc4.1196
Review target: white. Review status: reviewed
Audit result: confirmed white · reviewer georgina · 2026-05-19 21:53
Classifier flags: white
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Despite higher incidence and mortality of breast cancer among younger Black women, genetic testing outcomes remain severely understudied among Blacks. Past research on disclosure of genetic testing results to family members has disproportionately focused on White, educated, high socioeconomic status women. This study addresses this gap in knowledge by assessing (a) to whom Black women disclose genetic test results and (b) if patterns of disclosure vary based on test result (e.g., <jats:italic>BRCA1/2</jats:italic> positive, negative, variant of uncertain significance [VUS]). Black women (<jats:italic>N</jats:italic> = 149) with invasive breast cancer diagnosed age ≤50 years from 2009 to 2012 received free genetic testing through a prospective, population‐based study. At 12 months post‐testing, women reported with whom they shared their genetic test results. The exact test by binomial distribution was used to examine whether disclosure to female relatives was significantly greater than disclosure to male relatives, and logistic regression analyses tested for differences in disclosure to any female relative, any male relative, parents, siblings, children, and spouses by genetic test result. Most (77%) women disclosed their results to at least one family member. Disclosure to female relatives was significantly greater than disclosure to males (<jats:italic>p</jats:italic> < .001). Compared to those who tested negative or had a VUS, <jats:italic>BRCA1/2‐</jats:italic>positive women were significantly less likely to disclose results to their daughters (OR<jats:italic><jats:sub>BRCA</jats:sub></jats:italic><jats:sub> positive</jats:sub> = 0.25, 95% CI = 0.07–0.94, <jats:italic>p</jats:italic> = .041) by 12 months post‐genetic testing. Genetic test result did not predict any other type of disclosure (all <jats:italic>p</jats:italic>s > 0.12). Results suggest that in Black families, one benefit of genetic testing—to inform patients and their family about cancer risk information—is not being realized. To increase breast cancer preventive care among high‐risk Black women, the oncology care team should prepare Black <jats:italic>BRCA1/2‐</jats:italic>positive women to share genetic test results with family members and, in particular, their daughters.</jats:p>