Conference Coverage

Some young CRC patients are missing out on genetic counseling, testing


 

AT ACG 2022

Educate patients and physicians

In an interview, Daniel J. Pambianco, MD, from Charlottesville (Va.) Gastroenterology Associates, who was not involved in the study, commented that patient perceptions about the consequences of genetic testing may be a barrier to either getting a referral for counseling or following through on one.

“Oftentimes patients will perceive anything with ‘genetic’ in it as if their genes are somehow being manipulated, and we need to do a better job at educating patients in that regard,” he said.

Physicians, both primary care practitioners and gastroenterologists, also need to fully appreciate the importance of genetic testing in this population, “because in essence there may be a 4%, 5%, or 6% risk of genetic syndromes that we’re missing and cannot pick up just from getting patients’ histories,” he said.

The investigators did not report a study funding source. Dr. Syed and Dr. Pambianco reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Sexual issues common for GI patients, but docs often avoid topic
MDedge Internal Medicine
New update focuses on acute kidney injury management in cirrhosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Children with asymptomatic celiac disease may have severe disease histology
MDedge Internal Medicine
COVID tied to spike in deaths in chronic liver disease with diabetes
MDedge Internal Medicine
C. diff recurrence drops with highly targeted ridinilazole
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves upadacitinib (Rinvoq) for sixth indication
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ulcerative colitis: Reassuring findings on long-term tofacitinib reported
MDedge Internal Medicine
Pancreatic cancer screening appears safe, effective for high-risk patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Time to ditch clarithromycin for H. pylori?
MDedge Internal Medicine
EUS-guided RF ablation doubles survival for unresectable pancreatic cancer
MDedge Internal Medicine