A brief assessment of concerns associated with genetic testing for cancer: The multidimensional impact of cancer risk assessment (MICRA) questionnaire.

David Cella(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Chanita Hughes(Georgetown University), Amy H. Peterman(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Chih‐Hung Chang(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Beth N. Peshkin(Georgetown University), Marc D. Schwartz(Georgetown University), Lari Wenzel(University of California, Irvine), Amy A. Lemke(NorthShore University HealthSystem), Alfred C. Marcus, Caryn Lerman(Georgetown University)
Health Psychology
January 1, 2002
Cited by 288

Abstract

The Multidimensional Impact of Cancer Risk Assessment (MICRA) is a new tool to measure the specific impact of result disclosure after genetic testing. The authors compared its performance with that of questionnaires measuring general and cancer-specific distress. Participants (158 women) responded 1 month after they received genetic test results. The women were divided into 4 standard clinical test result groups: BRCA1/2 positive, BRCA1/2 negative, panel negative, and true negative. Factor analysis supported the formation of 3 subscales: Distress (6 items, alpha = .86), Uncertainty (9 items, alpha = .77), and Positive Experiences (4 items, alpha = .75). All 3 MICRA subscales differentiated participants who were BRCA1/2 positive from the other 3 groups. MICRA thus helps identify subgroups of vulnerable genetic testing participants.


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