Risk Map
LH
Your Geneprint Prevention Plan

My Cancer Risk Map

Only the cancer types relevant to your profile are shown below. Each one explains why it was identified, what it means, and what to do next.

Partner hospitalSt. Aurelia General
Programme valid until14 Feb 2027
View Screening & Prevention Plan

Pancreatic

High inherited

Based on: confirmed pathogenic germline variant (whole-genome sequencing)

Why

Whole-genome sequencing identified a pathogenic germline variant that is clinically linked to pancreatic cancer risk.

What it means

A specific inherited genetic change was found that is clinically linked to this cancer. This does not mean pancreatic cancer will develop — it means your baseline risk differs from the general population and warrants specialist input.

What to do

A referral to genetic counselling is recommended, due in 20 days. A counsellor can explain what this finding means for you and, where relevant, for your family. See your Screening & Prevention Plan for the booking action.

What the limitation is

Genetic findings describe risk, not certainty. Carrying this variant does not guarantee this cancer will develop, and not everyone who carries it goes on to be diagnosed.

Classification: pathogenic (not a variant of uncertain significance). Gene context: a gene associated with hereditary pancreatic cancer risk, identified via whole-genome sequencing during your baseline programme, clinically reviewed prior to report approval.

Family implications: a variant like this can sometimes be inherited from a parent or passed to children. Your genetic counsellor can advise on whether targeted testing may be worth considering for close biological relatives — this is a conversation to have with a specialist, not something to act on alone.

Colorectal

Significant

Based on: family history + screening history

Why

A first-degree relative was diagnosed with colorectal cancer before age 50, and your own screening history has a gap against what's recommended for your profile.

What it means

Your risk is meaningfully higher than the general population, which is why enhanced screening is recommended.

What to do

Book your colorectal screening — this is currently overdue. See your Screening & Prevention Plan to book it with Gastroenterology at St. Aurelia General.

What the limitation is

This assessment reflects currently available data and does not guarantee this cancer will or won't develop.

Breast

Standard

Based on: standard population model

Why

Your profile aligns with the standard population risk model — no elevated hereditary or lifestyle drivers were identified for breast cancer.

What it means

Your risk aligns with the general population; routine screening applies.

What to do

Continue routine mammography on the standard biennial schedule. Your most recent mammogram was completed 3 months ago and returned a result within the expected range.

What the limitation is

A standard classification reflects your profile today. It does not rule out changes over time, which is why routine rescreening remains important even without elevated risk.

Skin

Standard

Based on: UV exposure history

Why

Your reported UV exposure history was identified as a relevant driver worth monitoring for skin cancer risk.

What it means

Your risk aligns with the general population, with UV exposure as a factor worth tracking through routine dermatological review.

What to do

Continue your annual dermatological review, planned for approximately 2 months from now with Dermatology at St. Aurelia General.

What the limitation is

This assessment is based on reported exposure history and does not account for every environmental or occupational factor. Any new or changing skin lesion should be reviewed promptly regardless of this classification.

Lung

Not currently assessable

Based on: insufficient validated data

Why

There is currently insufficient validated data for your specific profile to produce a reliable lung cancer risk classification.

What it means

There isn't enough validated data for your profile yet — this does not mean risk is absent, it means it can't be reliably classified.

What to do

Follow national lung-screening guidance for your age and history. Let your care team know if your smoking history, occupational exposure, or family history changes — this may allow a fuller assessment.

What the limitation is

As more validated data becomes available for profiles like yours, this assessment may be revisited and updated.

Understanding a "Standard" or "Not Assessable" Result

For cancer types marked Standard or Not currently assessable — such as breast, skin and lung above — this does not mean the absence of risk. It means no medically actionable inherited variant or elevated pattern was found for that cancer type in your data today. Risk for those cancers is still tracked through your clinical history, family history and biological markers, and will be revisited at each check-in and annual reassessment.

This map does not replace clinical judgement. Every finding above has been reviewed by your supervising physician before being shown to you. If anything is unclear, ask Ask Geneprint or contact your care team.