Facilitating return of actionable genetic research results from a biobank repository: participant uptake and utilization of digital interventions.

IF 3.3 Q2 GENETICS & HEREDITY HGG Advances Pub Date : 2024-08-24 DOI:10.1016/j.xhgg.2024.100346
Lillian Phung, Elisabeth Wood, Brian Egleston, Lily Hoffman-Andrews, Demetrios Ofidis, Sarah Howe, Rajia Mim, Hannah Griffin, Dominique Fetzer, Anjali Owens, Susan Domchek, Reed Pyeritz, Bryson Katona, Staci Kallish, Giorgio Sirugo, JoEllen Weaver, Katherine L Nathanson, Daniel J Rader, Angela R Bradbury
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Abstract

Research participants report interest in receiving genetic research results. How best to return results remains unclear. In this randomized pilot study, we sought to assess the feasibility of returning actionable research results through a two-step process including a patient-centered digital intervention as compared to a genetic counselor (GC) in the Penn Medicine biobank. In Step 1, participants with an actionable result and procedural controls (no actionable result) were invited to digital pre-disclosure education and provided options for opting out of results. In Step 2, those with actionable results who had not opted out were randomized to receive results via a digital disclosure intervention or with a GC. Five participants (2%) opted out of results after Step 1. After both steps, 52/113 (46.0%) of eligible cases received results, 5 (4.4%) actively declined results, 34 (30.1%) passively declined and 22 (19.5%) could not be reached. Receiving results was associated with younger age (p<0.001), completing pre-disclosure education (p<0.001) and being in the GC arm (p=0.06). Being older, female, and of Black race were associated with being unable to reach. Older age and Black race were associated with passively declining. 47% of those who received results did not have personal or family history to suggest the mutation, and 55.1% completed clinical confirmation testing. The use of digital tools may be acceptable to participants and could reduce costs of returning results. Low uptake, disparities in uptake, and barriers to confirmation testing will be important to address to realize the benefit of returning actionable research results.

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促进从生物库返回可操作的基因研究成果:参与者对数字干预措施的接受和利用。
研究参与者表示有兴趣收到基因研究结果。如何以最佳方式返还结果仍不清楚。在这项随机试点研究中,我们试图评估通过两步流程返还可操作研究结果的可行性,其中包括以患者为中心的数字干预,并与宾夕法尼亚医学院生物库中的遗传咨询师(GC)进行比较。在步骤 1 中,有可操作结果和程序控制(无可操作结果)的参与者被邀请参加数字预披露教育,并提供选择退出结果的选项。在步骤 2 中,那些有可操作结果但未选择退出的参与者被随机分配到通过数字披露干预或通过 GC 接收结果。有五名参与者(2%)在步骤 1 之后选择退出。在这两个步骤之后,52/113(46.0%)个符合条件的案例收到了结果,5(4.4%)个主动拒绝结果,34(30.1%)个被动拒绝,22(19.5%)个无法联系。收到结果与年龄较小(p
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来源期刊
HGG Advances
HGG Advances Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Molecular Medicine
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
4.50%
发文量
69
审稿时长
14 weeks
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