Michelle Guterman and her mother, Karen Shmerling, are “previvors.” Both women tested positive for the breast cancer gene (BRCA) and took steps to reduce the chance of having cancer before it was detected.
Guterman, 39, grew up in Sandy Springs and attended the University of Georgia. As a child life specialist in Augusta and Washington, D.C., Guterman helped young patients, their parents, and families adjust to medical conditions. She and her now husband, Josh, moved to Atlanta where Guterman attended the physician assistant program at Emory University.
As a teen, Guterman volunteered at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. The medical world was familiar because her father, Dr. Ricky Shmerling, is an anesthesiologist. So when a colleague encouraged Guterman to take the BRCA test, it seemed like something she could do to help science. Little did she know she’d be a mid-30s mom diagnosed with a gene that is linked to breast cancer.
According to JScreen, a national nonprofit headquartered at Emory University’s Department of Human Genetics, everyone has genes that help prevent their bodies from developing cancer. If there is a harmful mutation in one of these genes, it will not work properly, significantly increasing the risk for cancer.
Guterman and Shmerling took the at-home comprehensive genetic test by JScreen. BRCA is more prevalent in people of Ashkenazi descent.
“I remember sitting on my bed, filling out the information about anyone in my family who had breast cancer, ovarian cancer, prostate cancer. All the answers were no,” said Guterman, “So I did it and then went about my life, honestly.”
She was at the park with her daughter and husband when a call came in to let her know the BRCA-2 test was positive. She immediately called her parents.
“I don’t remember a lot of what she said because I was so in shock. I felt like she was wrong,” Guterman recalled.
Guterman’s mother refused to believe…
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