Peer Support For Young Adult Women With High Breast Cancer Risk

Purpose

This trial will recruit young adult female relatives (YARs) of male or female carriers of BRCA1/2. YARs who consent to participate will be randomized to either a 3-session peer coach-led telephone counseling intervention or usual care navigation to peer support interventions provided by community organizations that support the hereditary cancer community. Study aims are to 1) Assess intervention effects on distress and decision making outcomes, including uptake of counseling for untested YARs, 2) Identify YARs most likely to engage with and benefit from the intervention, 3) Understand intervention mechanisms. Participants will complete interviews at baseline, 1, 6, and 12 months.

Condition

  • Breast Cancer Risk

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  • There are two targets for recruitment with different eligibility criteria. Index carriers: - Men or women aged 18 or older with BRCA mutations with or without 2nd-tier multiplex panel genetic testing. Index carriers will have received testing. YARs: - Female 1st-, 2nd- or 3rd-degree biological relatives of index carriers aged 21-30.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Must be able to speak English or Spanish and provide informed consent

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Other
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
PeACE peer coaching arm
Behavioral, PeACE, PeACE consists of 3 streamlined 30-minute psychosocial telephone counseling sessions delivered by a well-trained peer coach. Coaches are lay YARs from HBOC families demonstrating good knowledge, communication skills, and protocol mastery.
  • Behavioral: PeACE
    3 session peer coaching intervention
Active Comparator
Community peer coaching arm
Behavioral, usual care, Participants in the usual care arm will receive navigation to peer support with a range of community groups who provide these services.
  • Behavioral: Community peer coaching
    Peer coaching provided by community organizations that support the HBOC community

More Details

Status
Active, not recruiting
Sponsor
Georgetown University

Study Contact

Detailed Description

Germline (e.g., BRCA) mutation carriers have highly elevated odds of developing hereditary breast-ovarian cancer (HBOC), as could their relatives. Referral to genetic counseling is the standard of care for young, at-risk adult relatives (i.e., ages 18-39; herein "YARs"). However, many female YARs struggle to make decisions about familial HBOC risk management, including whether and when to pursue genetic counseling, how to cope with stress and uncertainty about HBOC, and how to navigate lifecycle events entwined with HBOC threats (e.g., childbearing). Prior work points to YARs' strong desires to seek HBOC risk information and emotional support beyond traditional genetic counseling-especially support from knowledgeable peers who can relate to their experiences and offer neutral grounding and objective guidance about coping strategies. Peer support is a promising psychosocial cancer care approach that could fill this void. However, few evidence-based standards inform its practice as an adjunct to cancer genetic counseling. As genetic testing for HBOC risk expands population-wide, new ways must be tested to reach, educate, and support YARs to further reduce the cancer burden in communities of at-risk women. The 2-arm PeACE trial includes streamlined telephone counseling delivered by well-trained community peer coaches, with session content incorporating coping training for HBOC stress reduction, and decision making and problem solving training about genetic counseling and HBOC risk. Trial participants are female YARs (aged 21-30) randomized to an intervention or equated control condition, and followed for up to 12 months.