False family history of breast cancer in the family cancer clinic.

AIMS Awareness of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer in both the general public and the medical profession is increasing. Individuals who may be at risk on the basis of a family history are requesting risk determination and appropriate management in a variety of settings. Risk determination relies largely on pedigree analysis and epidemiological data. METHODS We describe five individuals presenting in the family cancer or genetic counselling clinic where a factitious family or personal history led to erroneous risk estimation. Common factors in these families are a history of benign breast disease, poor communication within families, long survival with early onset or bilateral disease, a lack of detailed knowledge of the illness and treatment in close relatives and inconsistencies in the history in repeated consultations.

[1]  S. Pendlebury Malignant Munchausen's , 1991, The Medical journal of Australia.

[2]  R. Love,et al.  The accuracy of patient reports of a family history of cancer. , 1985, Journal of chronic diseases.

[3]  P. Fishkin,et al.  Munchausen's syndrome and cancer , 1994, Journal of surgical oncology.

[4]  G. Masterton Factitious disorders and the surgeon , 1995, The British journal of surgery.

[5]  N. Risch,et al.  Autosomal dominant inheritance of early‐onset breast cancer. Implications for risk prediction , 1994 .

[6]  A. Howell,et al.  Familial breast cancer. , 1994, BMJ.

[7]  R. Asher Munchausen's syndrome. , 1951, Lancet.