Ancestry-Specific Hypothetical Genetic Feedback About Lung Cancer Risk in African American Individuals Who Smoke: Cognitive, Emotional, and Motivational Effects on Cessation
Joel Erblich, Khin Htet, Camille Ragin, Elizabeth Blackman, Isaac Lipkus, Cherie Erkmen, Dina Bitterman

TL;DR
This study explores how providing ancestry-specific genetic risk information about lung cancer affects African American smokers' motivation to quit.
Contribution
The study introduces ancestry-specific genetic feedback as a novel approach to influence health behavior change in African American smokers.
Findings
Participants with high genetic risk and African ancestry reported increased perceived lung cancer risk.
Genetic and ancestry feedback significantly influenced motivation to quit smoking through cognitive and emotional factors.
Ancestry-specific feedback could improve genetic counseling for underserved populations.
Abstract
Genetic factors play an important role in the risk of developing lung cancer, a disease that disproportionately affects African American (AA) individuals who smoke. Accumulating evidence suggests that specific ancestry-informative genetic markers are predictive of lung cancer risk in AA individuals who smoke. Although testing for, and communication of, genetic risk to patients should impact health and screening, results are mixed. The goal of this study was to evaluate the effects of genetic risk communication that also included ancestry-specific risk information among African American individuals who smoke. Using an experimental design, African American individuals who smoke (n = 166) were assigned randomly to receive hypothetical genetic test results that indicated (1) low vs. high genetic risk for lung cancer (“Risk”) and (2) European vs. African Ancestry (“Ancestry”). We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFamily Support in Illness · BRCA gene mutations in cancer · Smoking Behavior and Cessation
