Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-14-2025

Comments

This article is the author’s final published version in JMIR Cancer, Volume 11, 2025, Article number e69787.

The published version is available at https://doi.org/10.2196/69787. Copyright © Amy E Leader, Stacy Loeb, Preethi Selvan, Ashley Hunter, Rebecca Hartman, Scott W Keith, Veda N Giri.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Germline genetic variants are important for prostate cancer (PCa) management and hereditary cancer risk assessment, but testing is underused. Furthermore, patients are often unaware of the genetic connections to PCa. Social media is increasingly serving as a source of awareness for health information and a method to gather data from a large population.

OBJECTIVE: There were three objectives: to (1) create and test social media messages related to PCa genetics and genetic testing, (2) determine which social media message was most engaging, and (3) assess knowledge of and attitudes toward PCa genetic testing through an online survey using the most engaging social media message.

METHODS: A paid social media campaign was developed to disseminate targeted messages about PCa and genetics. We tested combinations of 8 images and 8 messages that were created or selected by the research team and reviewed by a study-specific advisory board. We targeted men and women older than 35 years living in the United States. The campaign was launched on Facebook for 6 days (June 3-8, 2023). We tracked the reach and impressions of each post. The survey, administered directly after someone viewed a post, assessed knowledge about PCa and cancer genetics as well as beliefs about cancer risk and genetic testing. Descriptive and multivariable analyses were used to analyze survey data.

RESULTS: Most posts were viewed by women (13,675/16,224, 84.3% of impressions) and people over the age of 55 years (19,997/22,906, 87.3% of impressions). The 2 most engaging images were a group of men of different races and ethnicities (reach: 28,151 people; impressions: 33,727 views), followed by a Hispanic family (reach: 16,026 people; impressions: 20,113 views). The following message had the most engagement: "Breast cancer and prostate cancer may be related because they can arise from the same gene mutation in a family" (reach: 58,980 people; impressions: 74,834 views). A total of 875 people (n=796, 91% male; mean age 43.42, SD 14.1 years; n=224, 25.6% Black or African American individuals; n=255, 29.1% Hispanic individuals) completed the survey. In total, 75.2% (658/875) strongly or somewhat agreed that genetics play a role in the development of PCa, and 84% (735/875) would want to know if they had a genetic predisposition to PCa.

CONCLUSIONS: It is feasible to use social media platforms to test and disseminate messages that raise awareness about PCa genetics and the connection with other cancers (eg, breast cancer), as well as to deploy surveys that reach a wide audience.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

PubMed ID

41086012

Language

English

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