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NCI CANCERLIT® Search: Genetic Counseling and Screening - October 2001

National Cancer Institute®
Ultima Vez Modificado: 21 de noviembre del 2001

  • Screening of Bcr-Abl transcripts in Philadelphia negative essential thrombocythemia.

  • Transferrin receptor-2 gene and non-C282Y homozygous patients with hemochromatosis.

  • Genetic analysis of carbamoylphosphate synthetase I and ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency using fibroblasts.

  • Characterization of the murine Lbx2 promoter, identification of the human homologue, and evaluation as a candidate for Alstrom syndrome.

  • Molecular genetic diagnostic program of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A and familial medullary thyroid carcinoma syndromes in Hungary.

  • Calpain 3 gene mutations: genetic and clinico-pathologic findings in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.

  • RAGs: A novel approach to computerized genetic risk assessment and decision support from pedigrees.

  • An interactive computer program can effectively educate patients about genetic testing for breast cancer susceptibility.

  • Education about genetic testing for breast cancer susceptibility: patient preferences for a computer program or genetic counselor.

  • Motivations and psychosocial impact of genetic testing for HNPCC.

  • France challenges patent for genetic screening of breast cancer.

  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: histopathological features of sudden death in cardiac troponin T disease.

  • Exclusion of large deletions and other rearrangements in BRCA1 and BRCA2 in Finnish breast and ovarian cancer families.

  • Guidelines for molecular genetic detection of susceptibility to malignant hyperthermia.

  • Molecular epidemiology of preterm delivery: methodology and challenges.

  • Rett syndrome in a boy with a 47,XXY karyotype confirmed by a rare mutation in the MECP2 gene.

  • Ethical issues in genetic testing. The experiences of one family diagnosed with an inherited cancer syndrome.

  • Molecular screening for hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer: a prospective, population-based study.

  • Evidence of association and linkage disequilibrium between a novel polymorphism in the transforming growth factor beta 1 gene and hip bone

  • Issues surrounding adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer during pregnancy.

  • Prenatal testing for Huntington's disease: experience within the UK 1994-1998.

  • Polymorphism screening of the insulin receptor-related receptor gene (INSRR) on 1q in Pima Indians.

  • Information and support needs of women with primary relatives with breast cancer: development of the Information and Support Needs

  • Why should primary care physicians know about breast cancer genetics?

  • Maple syrup urine disease: identification and carrier-frequency determination of a novel founder mutation in the Ashkenazi Jewish

  • French researchers take a stand against cancer gene patent.

  • TEL/AML1 rearrangement and the prognostic significance in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Hong Kong.

  • [From gene to disease; neurofibromatosis type 1]

  • Logistic regression in the medical literature: standards for use and reporting, with particular attention to one medical domain.

  • Communicating genetic test results to the family: a six-step, skills-building strategy.

  • [Detection of HFE polymorphism in German patients with hereditary hemochromatosis]

  • [Detection of HFE polymorphism in German patients with hereditary hemochromatosis]

  • Medullary thyroid carcinoma: role of genetic testing and calcitonin measurement.

  • [Genetic diagnosis of cancers? Which cancers should be screened?]

  • [Practical data on digestive tract oncogenetics]

  • Colorectal cancer screening.

  • Molecular genetics of pseudoxanthoma elasticum.

  • Cancer-specific worry interference in women attending a breast and ovarian cancer risk evaluation program: impact on emotional distress and

  • Practice parameters for the identification and testing of patients at risk for dominantly inherited colorectal cancer--supporting

  • Genetic drift: genetic screening.

  • Looking at genes in the workplace.

  • Ethnicity, bioethics, and prenatal diagnosis: the amniocentesis decisions of Mexican-origin women and their partners.

  • Collective fear, individualized risk: the social and cultural context of genetic testing for breast cancer.

  • Cancer genetic susceptibility testing: ethical and policy implications for future research and clinical practice. Cancer Genetic Studies

  • Commentary: risks and benefits, testing and screening, cancer, genes and dollars.

  • Commercial predictive testing: the desirability of one overseeing body.

  • Patient attitudes toward testing for maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein values when results are false-positive or true-negative.

  • Cancer risk notification: psychosocial and ethical implications.

  • Medical genetics.

  • Screening for fetal and genetic abnormalities.

  • Seminar on ethical issues arising from molecular studies in human genetic disease: held under the auspices of the UK Cancer Family Study

  • Ethical issues in genetic testing for Huntington's disease: lessons for the study of familial cancers.

  • Ethical issues: the geneticist's view point.

  • Legal and ethical issues in the laboratory assessment of genetic susceptibility to cancer.

  • Attitudes of Dutch general practitioners towards presymptomatic DNA-testing for Huntington disease.

  • Altered fates--counseling families with inherited breast cancer.

  • Attitudes towards molecular genetic testing for neurofibromatosis type 1 in Western Australia.

  • Human Genome Project and cancer: the ethical implications for clinical practice.

  • For the benefit of all.

  • An economic appraisal of screening for Down's syndrome in pregnancy using maternal age and serum alpha fetoprotein concentration.

  • Prenatal diagnosis for couples who would not consider abortion.

  • Statement on use of DNA testing for presymptomatic identification of cancer risk. National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research.

  • Psychological issues in genetic testing for breast cancer susceptibility.

  • Warning on cancer gene screening.

  • Active cascade testing for carriers of cystic fibrosis gene.

  • Attitudes about genetic testing for breast-ovarian cancer susceptibility.

  • Statement of the American Society of Human Genetics on genetic testing for breast and ovarian cancer predisposition.

  • What price screening?

  • Genetic testing set for takeoff.

  • Scientific and ethical aspects of genetic screening of workers for cancer risk: the case of the N-acetyltransferase phenotype.

  • Breast cancer genetic screening and critical bioethics' gaze.

  • Interest in genetic testing among first-degree relatives of breast cancer patients.

  • Attitudes toward genetic testing for colon cancer risk.

  • Informed consent and BRCA1 testing.

  • Psychosocial and ethical implications of defining genetic risk for cancers.

  • Ethical issues and molecular biology in urology.

  • Ethical issues and genetic counselling.

  • Ethical issues in screening and testing for genetic diseases.

  • Pitfalls of genetic testing.

  • Genetic screening for breast cancer.

  • Panel softens cancer gene test warning.

  • A 35-year-old pregnant woman considering maternal serum screening and amniocentesis.

  • Statement of the American Society of Clinical Oncology: genetic testing for cancer susceptibility, Adopted on February 20, 1996.

  • Breast cancer susceptibility genes: current challenges and future promises.

  • Attitudes of 47 mothers of pediatric oncology patients toward genetic testing for cancer predisposition.

  • BRCA1 testing in families with hereditary breast-ovarian cancer. A prospective study of patient decision making and outcomes.

  • Testing for inherited cancer susceptibility.

  • Rifkin's latest target: genetic testing.

  • Legal and ethical issues in genetic testing and counseling for susceptibility to breast, ovarian and colon cancer.

  • The emerging role of the physician in genetic counselling and testing for heritable breast, ovarian and colon cancer.

  • A model protocol for evaluating the behavioral and psychosocial effects of BRCA1 testing.

  • Glad and terrified: on the ethics of BRACA1 and 2 testing.

  • Is genetic testing premature?

  • Parents' responses to predictive genetic testing in their children: report of a single case study.

  • Are we ready to screen for inherited susceptibility to cancer?

  • Genetic testing of families with hereditary diseases.

  • Coming to grips with genes and risk.

  • Attitudes to predictive DNA testing in familial adenomatous polyposis.

  • As concern grows over screening.

  • Genetic screening: not just another blood test.

  • Pitfalls of genetic testing.

  • Attitudes towards cancer predictive testing and transmission of information to the family.

  • Notification of a family history of breast cancer: issues of privacy and confidentiality.

  • Ethical and scientific considerations for chemoprevention research in cohorts at genetic risk for breast cancer.

  • Selection for presymptomatic testing for Huntington's disease: who decides?

  • Women's need for information before attending genetic counselling for familial breast or ovarian cancer: a questionnaire, interview, and

  • The use and interpretation of commercial APC gene testing for familial adenomatous polyposis.

  • Consent, confidentiality, and research.

  • Psychological opportunities and hazards in predictive genetic testing for cancer risk.

  • Parents' responses to predictive genetic testing in their children.

  • Genetic testing for susceptibility to adult-onset cancer. The process and content of informed consent.

  • Hereditary cancer risk notification and testing: how interested is the general population?

  • "Decoding" informed consent. Insights from women regarding breast cancer susceptibility testing.

  • Genetic susceptibility testing. A therapeutic illusion.

  • A descriptive study of BRCA1 testing and reactions to disclosure of test results.

  • Genetic testing for cancer risk.

  • Ethical terms set for breast cancer test.

  • Decision-making about genetic testing among women at familial risk for breast cancer.

  • Genetic testing and informed consent.

  • Insurers keep genetic test options open.

  • Ethical issues in genetic screening for cancer.

  • Genetic testing for cancer risk: how to reconcile the conflicts.

  • Benefits and dangers of genetic tests.

  • Ethical aspects of genetic counseling in familial breast and ovarian cancer. Combining applied theory and reflective practice.

  • "Code of practice and guidance on human genetic testing services supplied direct to the public". Advisory Committee on Genetic Testing.

  • Antenatal screening for Down's syndrome: where are we and where next?

  • Genetic testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2: recommendations of the Stanford Program in Genomics, Ethics, and Society. Breast Cancer Working Group.

  • Genetic testing for renal diseases: medical and ethical considerations.

  • Genetic testing in families with hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer.

  • Great expectations: historical perspectives on genetic breast cancer testing.

  • Genetic counselling for hereditary breast cancer.

  • Informed consent in the genetic age.

  • BRCA1: to test or not to test, that is the question.

  • A public health perspective on the control of predictive screening for breast cancer.

  • Di Goldine Medina (The Golden Land): historical perspectives of eugenics and the east European (Ashkenazi) Jewish-American community, 1880-1925.

  • Jewish theological and moral reflections on genetic screening: the case of BRCA1.

  • Breast cancer, the genetic "quick fix," and the Jewish community. Ethical, legal, and social challenges.

  • The psychological impact of a negative BRCA1 test: a wolf in sheep's clothing?

  • Psychological impact of receiving negative BRCA1 mutation test results in Ashkenazim.

  • Mammography behavior after receiving a negative BRCA1 mutation test result in the Ashkenazim: a community-based study.

  • Heterogeneity of late-infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis.

  • Genetic testing for colon cancer: joint statement of the American College of Medical Genetics and American Society of Human Genetics.

  • First BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene testing implemented in the health care system of Stockholm.

  • Sensitivity and specificity of denaturing high-pressure liquid chromatography for unknown protein C gene mutations.

  • PCR-RFLP genotyping assay for the Bcl I polymorphism of the beta-fibrinogen gene.

  • Prevalence of cystic fibrosis mutations in Israeli Jews.

  • Carrier screening for Gaucher disease in couples of mixed ethnicity.

  • Effects of coping style and BRCA1 and BRCA2 test results on anxiety among women participating in genetic counseling and testing for breast

  • Molecular genetic abnormalities in premalignant lung lesions: biological and clinical implications.

  • Association and aggregation analysis using kin-cohort designs with applications to genotype and family history data from the Washington

  • Screening for trisomy 21 in twin pregnancies in the first trimester: does chorionicity impact on maternal serum free beta-hCG or PAPP-A

  • Assessment of the value of reporting partial screening results in prenatal screening for Down syndrome.

  • [Phenotypic expression of a mutation in MEN 2A documented in a family in the western part of Sweden]

  • Support groups for people carrying a BRCA mutation.

  • CDKN2A and CDK4 mutation analysis in Italian melanoma-prone families: functional characterization of a novel CDKN2A germ line mutation.

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