The psychological impact of genetic testing in childhood cancer : a systematic review
- Author
- Sophie Van Hoyweghen (UGent) , Kathleen Claes (UGent) , Robin de Putter (UGent) , Claire Wakefield, Marieke Van Schoors, Sabine Hellemans (UGent) and Lesley Verhofstadt (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
- Abstract
- ObjectiveCancer predisposition syndromes are being more frequently recognized in the etiology of pediatric oncology and genetic-related technologies are evolving rapidly, leading to an increasing availability of genetic testing for families. This systematic review assessed the psychological impact of genetic testing on children and parents in the context of childhood cancer.MethodsSearches were performed using three databases (Web of Science, Pubmed and Embase) to identify relevant empirical studies. Following Cochrane guidelines, we screened 3838 articles and identified 18 eligible studies, representing the perspectives of children and/or parents.ResultsThe included studies described the impact of genetic testing in different contexts (e.g. predictive testing and diagnostic testing) and in different subgroups, (e.g. carriers and non-carriers). Overall, the studies did not identify clinically-relevant long-term increases in negative emotions (depression, anxiety, distress, uncertainty, guilt) as a result of genetic testing. Negative emotions were typically time-limited and generally occurred in families with particular characteristics (e.g. those with a history of multiple cancer diagnoses, families receiving an unfavorable result for one child and a favorable result in siblings, and those with pre-existing mental health difficulties). Positive emotions (hopefulness, relief and peace of mind) were also reported. Knowing their genetic risk status appeared to help to foster empowerment among families, regardless of the result and any associated emotions.ConclusionsGenetic testing in pediatric oncology does not appear to cause significant additional harm and can lead to positive outcomes. Clinicians need to be especially attentive when counseling families at increased risk of distress.
- Keywords
- Psychiatry and Mental health, Oncology, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, cancer, cancer predisposition, children, genetic testing, oncology, parents, pediatric oncology, psycho-oncology, psychological impact, HEREDITARY CANCER, CHILDREN, RISK, DISTRESS, PREDISPOSITION, SURVEILLANCE, EXPERIENCE, FAMILIES, MELANOMA, BREAST
Downloads
-
(...).pdf
- full text (Published version)
- |
- UGent only
- |
- |
- 419.36 KB
-
(...).pdf
- full text
- |
- UGent only (changes to open access on 2024-12-31)
- |
- |
- 556.56 KB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HM94KSBKNQTAFHV5J5TB16KX
- MLA
- Van Hoyweghen, Sophie, et al. “The Psychological Impact of Genetic Testing in Childhood Cancer : A Systematic Review.” PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, vol. 33, no. 1, 2024, doi:10.1002/pon.6279.
- APA
- Van Hoyweghen, S., Claes, K., de Putter, R., Wakefield, C., Van Schoors, M., Hellemans, S., & Verhofstadt, L. (2024). The psychological impact of genetic testing in childhood cancer : a systematic review. PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, 33(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.6279
- Chicago author-date
- Van Hoyweghen, Sophie, Kathleen Claes, Robin de Putter, Claire Wakefield, Marieke Van Schoors, Sabine Hellemans, and Lesley Verhofstadt. 2024. “The Psychological Impact of Genetic Testing in Childhood Cancer : A Systematic Review.” PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY 33 (1). https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.6279.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Van Hoyweghen, Sophie, Kathleen Claes, Robin de Putter, Claire Wakefield, Marieke Van Schoors, Sabine Hellemans, and Lesley Verhofstadt. 2024. “The Psychological Impact of Genetic Testing in Childhood Cancer : A Systematic Review.” PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY 33 (1). doi:10.1002/pon.6279.
- Vancouver
- 1.Van Hoyweghen S, Claes K, de Putter R, Wakefield C, Van Schoors M, Hellemans S, et al. The psychological impact of genetic testing in childhood cancer : a systematic review. PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY. 2024;33(1).
- IEEE
- [1]S. Van Hoyweghen et al., “The psychological impact of genetic testing in childhood cancer : a systematic review,” PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, vol. 33, no. 1, 2024.
@article{01HM94KSBKNQTAFHV5J5TB16KX, abstract = {{ObjectiveCancer predisposition syndromes are being more frequently recognized in the etiology of pediatric oncology and genetic-related technologies are evolving rapidly, leading to an increasing availability of genetic testing for families. This systematic review assessed the psychological impact of genetic testing on children and parents in the context of childhood cancer.MethodsSearches were performed using three databases (Web of Science, Pubmed and Embase) to identify relevant empirical studies. Following Cochrane guidelines, we screened 3838 articles and identified 18 eligible studies, representing the perspectives of children and/or parents.ResultsThe included studies described the impact of genetic testing in different contexts (e.g. predictive testing and diagnostic testing) and in different subgroups, (e.g. carriers and non-carriers). Overall, the studies did not identify clinically-relevant long-term increases in negative emotions (depression, anxiety, distress, uncertainty, guilt) as a result of genetic testing. Negative emotions were typically time-limited and generally occurred in families with particular characteristics (e.g. those with a history of multiple cancer diagnoses, families receiving an unfavorable result for one child and a favorable result in siblings, and those with pre-existing mental health difficulties). Positive emotions (hopefulness, relief and peace of mind) were also reported. Knowing their genetic risk status appeared to help to foster empowerment among families, regardless of the result and any associated emotions.ConclusionsGenetic testing in pediatric oncology does not appear to cause significant additional harm and can lead to positive outcomes. Clinicians need to be especially attentive when counseling families at increased risk of distress.}}, articleno = {{e6279}}, author = {{Van Hoyweghen, Sophie and Claes, Kathleen and de Putter, Robin and Wakefield, Claire and Van Schoors, Marieke and Hellemans, Sabine and Verhofstadt, Lesley}}, issn = {{1057-9249}}, journal = {{PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY}}, keywords = {{Psychiatry and Mental health,Oncology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,cancer,cancer predisposition,children,genetic testing,oncology,parents,pediatric oncology,psycho-oncology,psychological impact,HEREDITARY CANCER,CHILDREN,RISK,DISTRESS,PREDISPOSITION,SURVEILLANCE,EXPERIENCE,FAMILIES,MELANOMA,BREAST}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{10}}, title = {{The psychological impact of genetic testing in childhood cancer : a systematic review}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1002/pon.6279}}, volume = {{33}}, year = {{2024}}, }
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: