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    Living with Hereditary Cancer Risk: What You and Your Family Need to Know

    Living with Hereditary Cancer Risk by Steligo, Kathy; Friedman, Sue; Kurian, Allison W.;

    What You and Your Family Need to Know

    Series: A Johns Hopkins Press Health Book;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 41.50
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        21 003 Ft (20 003 Ft + 5% VAT)
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      • Discounted price 19 323 Ft (18 403 Ft + 5% VAT)

    21 003 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
    • Date of Publication 21 December 2022

    • ISBN 9781421444253
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages496 pages
    • Size 234x155x35 mm
    • Weight 931 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 24 Line drawings, black & white
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    Long description:

    The most comprehensive guide available on hereditary cancers, from understanding risk, prevention, and genetic counseling and testing to treatment, quality of life, and more.

    Up to 10 percent of cancers are caused by inherited mutations in specific genes. Finding out that you or your loved ones may be at increased risk of developing cancer because of a genetic mutation raises a lot of questions: Is cancer inevitable? Is there anything I should do differently in my life? Will my children also be at higher risk of cancer? Should I have preemptive treatments or surgery? This comprehensive guide provides answers to these questions and more.

    Written by three passionate patient advocates, this book is a compilation of the trusted information and support provided for more than two decades by Facing Our Risk of Cancer Empowered (FORCE), the de facto voice of the hereditary cancer community. Combining the latest scientific research with national guidelines, expert advice, and compelling patient stories, the book offers previvors (those who have a mutation but have never been diagnosed), survivors, and their families the guidance they need to face the unique physical and emotional challenges of living in a high-risk body.

    An ideal resource for genetic counselors, physicians, nurses, advocates, and others who support and care for the hereditary cancer community, Living with Hereditary Cancer Risk also provides coverage of

    ? signs of inherited cancer risk in a family;
    ? the value of genetic counseling and testing;
    ? mutations in BRCA, Lynch Syndrome, and other genes that elevate cancer risk;
    ? risk-reducing strategies;
    ? traditional treatments and newer personalized approaches, including immunotherapies and PARP inhibitors;
    ? nationally recommended guidelines for prevention, early detection, and treatment;
    ? insurance coverage and discrimination protections; and
    ? coping with sexual health, fertility, menopause, and other quality of life issues.

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    Table of Contents:

    List of Tables
    Foreword, by Matthew Boland Yurgelun, MD
    Introduction
    Part I. Understanding Cancer and Inherited Risk
    1. The Link between Genetics and Cancer
    The Basics of Genetics
    Gene Wear and Tear and Repair
    How Cancers Develop and Grow
    Most Cancers Aren't Caused by Inherited Mutations
    2. What's Swimming in Your Gene Pool?
    Hidden Risk in the Family Tree
    Plotting Your Genetic Pedigree
    3. Signs of Hereditary Cancer
    The Value of Genetic Counseling
    Making Decisions about Testing
    Insurance Coverage
    Privacy and Protection
    4. What Your Test Results Tell You
    Positive, Negative, Maybe
    Making Sense of Statistics
    You Have a Mutation; Now What?
    Part II. Inherited Gene Mutations and the Cancers They Cause
    5. Introducing BRCA1 and BRCA2
    Who Inherits a BRCA Mutation?
    Signs of a BRCA Mutation
    Levels of Risk
    6. Lynch Syndrome: Five Genes, One Hereditary Syndrome
    Signs of Lynch Syndrome in Families
    Levels of Risk
    7. Other Genes That Are Linked to Inherited Cancer Risk
    Less Known, Less Studied Genes
    8. Breast Cancer Basics
    Signs and Symptoms
    What Affects Breast Cancer Risk?
    Types of Breast Cancer
    9. Gynecologic Cancers
    Ovarian, Fallopian Tube, and Primary Peritoneal Cancers
    Endometrial Cancers
    10. Gastrointestinal Cancers
    Colorectal Cancer
    Small Bowel Cancer
    Pancreatic Cancer
    Stomach Cancer
    Anal Cancer
    11. Genitourinary Cancers
    Prostate Cancer
    Bladder, Ureter, and Renal Pelvis Cancers
    12. Melanoma
    Melanoma of the Skin
    Ocular Melanoma
    Part III. Strategies for Risk Reduction and Early Detection
    13. Risk Management Guidelines
    Guidelines for BRCA1 or BRCA2 Gene Mutations
    Guidelines for Lynch Syndrome Gene Mutations
    Guidelines for Mutations in Other Genes
    14. Early Detection Strategies for High
    -Risk People
    The Vocabulary of Screening
    Surveillance for Breast Cancer
    Surveillance for Gynecologic Cancers
    Surveillance for Gastrointestinal Cancers
    Surveillance for Prostate and Other Genitourinary Cancers
    Surveillance for Melanoma
    Screening for Other Hereditary Cancers
    15. Medications That Reduce Cancer Risk
    Risk
    -Reducing Medications for Breast Cancer
    Risk
    -Reducing Medications for Gynecologic Cancers
    Risk
    -Reducing Medications for Colorectal Cancers
    16. Surgeries That Reduce Breast Cancer Risk
    Mastectomy Procedures
    Breast Reconstruction Choices
    Side Effects, Risks, and Recovery
    17. Surgeries That Reduce the Risk of Gynecologic Cancers
    Salpingo
    -Oophorectomy to Reduce the Risk of Ovarian Cancer
    Hysterectomy to Reduce the Risk of Endometrial Cancer
    18. Surgeries That Reduce the Risk of Gastrointestinal Cancers
    Total and Segmental Colectomy to Reduce the Risk of Colon Cancer
    Total Gastrectomy to Reduce the Risk of Stomach Cancer
    19. Factors That Affect Cancer Risk
    Nutrition, Weight, and Physical Activity
    Alcohol: An Unwise Choice
    Smoking and Tobacco Products
    Other Lifestyle and Behavioral Risk Factors
    Part IV. Treatment Choices for Hereditary Cancers
    20. Identifying Tumor Characteristics That Inform Treatment Choices
    Staging and Grading Cancer
    Targeted Approaches to Treatment
    DNA Damage Repair Genes
    21. Treating Breast Cancer
    Cancer Type, Subtype, and Stage
    Biomarker Testing
    Genetic Testing
    Options for Treatment
    Follow
    -Up Care
    22. Treating Gynecologic Cancers
    Options for Ovarian, Fallopian Tube, and Primary Peritoneal Cancers
    Options for Endometrial Cancer
    23. Treating Gastrointestinal Cancers
    Options for Colorectal Cancer
    Options for Pancreatic Cancer
    Options for Gastric Cancer
    24. Treating Genitourinary Cancers
    Options for Prostate Cancer
    Options for Bladder, Renal Pelvis, and Ureter Cancers
    25. Treating Melanoma
    Options for Melanoma in the Skin
    Options for Ocular Melanoma
    Part V. Living with Inherited High Risk
    26. Regaining Sexual Health and Intimacy
    Body Image
    Coping with Pain
    Reduced Sexual Desire
    Erectile Dysfunction
    Rebuilding Intimacy
    27. Effects of Prevention and Treatment on Fertility
    Preserving Fertility in Women
    Preserving Fertility in Men
    Other Parenting Alternatives
    28. Managing Menopause
    Symptoms of Early Menopause
    Replacement Hormones
    Long
    -Term Side Effects
    29. Side Effects and Other Quality
    -of
    -Life Issues
    Summarizing Side Effects by Treatment
    Managing Immediate Side Effects
    Long
    -Term Effects of Prevention and Treatment
    Previvorship, Survivorship, and Follow
    -Up Care
    End
    -of
    -Life Issues
    30. Making Difficult Decisions
    Start at the Beginning: Should You Be Tested?
    Decisions about Your Cancer Risk
    Decisions about Treatment
    Prevention and Treatment Clinical Trials
    Decision
    -Making in 15 Steps
    31. You Are Not Alone
    Create a Support System
    Find Emotional Strength
    Pursue Financial Resources
    Look to the Horizon
    Acknowledgments
    Glossary
    Notes
    Resources
    Index

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