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Knowledge of Genetic Risk Doesn’t Prompt Behavior Changes

Kathryn Doyle  |  March 23, 2016

(Reuters Health)—Telling patients about their genetic risk for disease doesn’t usually lead to healthy behavior changes, such as eating better or exercising more, according to a new analysis of existing studies.

Researchers selected 18 studies that tracked seven potential behavior changes—such as quitting smoking, diet, physical activity and using sun protection—among people who had received genetic risk information for conditions, including lung cancer, Crohn’s disease, melanoma, colorectal cancer, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and hypertension.

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In general, telling patients about their DNA-based risk estimates for these conditions did not affect their health behaviors or motivation to change behavior and did not lead to negative effects, such as depression or anxiety, the researchers reported online on March 15 in the BMJ.

Most of the evidence was low-quality, however, the authors note.

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Genetic tests have several possible uses, but this review suggests that such tests have no role in policies aimed at changing behavior to improve population health, said senior author Theresa M. Marteau of the Behavior and Health Research Unit at the University of Cambridge in the U.K.

“Two other possible uses include providing people with information to reduce uncertainty they may have about their chances of developing a disease even if the risk cannot be averted,” as in the case of the severe neurological disorder Huntington’s disease, and in categorizing people by risk to see who could benefit from interventions, such as surgery or medication, she said by email.

“Information is at best a weak intervention for changing behavior,” Marteau said. “We just have to reflect on the failure of most of us to keep our New Year’s resolutions … to realize that there is too often a gap or rather a chasm between our intentions and our behavior.”

Physical and economic cues, such as serving food with smaller tableware, may be a more effective way to prompt healthy behavior change, she said.

Genetic risk information may play a role in behavior change, but not on its own, said U.S. National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins, who was not part of the new review.

“Inducing behavior change for diet and exercise and is extremely difficult, and these subjects were not offered any support,” Collins told Reuters Health by phone. “Even if they thought they should do something about it there was no assistance.”

Linking genetic risk assessments with interventional support systems and resources, such as wearable fitness trackers, as is happening now in the federal government’s Precision Medicine Initiative, may have better results, he said.

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