

Two tools to read the family history. The Eisinger Score identifies whether your history warrants medical discussion. BOADICEA goes further, in the hands of specialists.
Assessing hereditary risk happens in two stages. First, identify situations that warrant attention — that is the Eisinger Score. Then, if necessary, precisely quantify that risk — that is BOADICEA. These two tools are not aimed at the same audience.
A family history is not a sentence.
It is information — that needs interpreting.
One for everyone, the other for specialists.
A simple tool to identify whether family history of breast and ovarian cancer warrants particular attention. It does not measure risk in percentages — it flags situations that are worth discussing.
A mathematical model used by genetic oncologists to precisely assess hereditary risk. The reference tool in the SENORIF 2025-2026 guidelines (Institut Curie, Gustave Roussy, AP-HP) and the only tool of its kind with European CE marking.
The Eisinger Score and BOADICEA are not competing — they are complementary. One identifies situations that warrant attention, the other quantifies risk when a specialist consultation confirms that interest.
In most cases, the process stops at the first level: the Eisinger Score is reassuring, and no further investigation is necessary.
The questionnaire uses the Eisinger Score to explore your family history, simply and entirely confidentially. No data is recorded.
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Legal notice. Page provided by Dr. Jérémie Zeitoun (RPPS: 10101463296) for exclusively educational and informational purposes. Information presented does not constitute medical advice. Sources: INCa, SENORIF 2025-2026 (Institut Curie / Gustave Roussy / AP-HP). Updated: April 2026.