Graves Kristi D, Sinicrope Pamela S, McCormick Jennifer B, Zhou Yingjun, Vadaparampil Susan T, Lindor Noralane M
Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., USA.
Public Health Genomics. 2015;18(3):173-83. doi: 10.1159/000375479. Epub 2015 Mar 12.
Frameworks highlighting disease actionability and severity are evolving to address the need to organize results from genome-wide analyses. This approach represents a paradigm shift from consultations focused on one or more genes to multiple genes for multiple disorders. Empirical input from the general population is lacking, yet seems essential for understanding how to maximize patient autonomy and satisfaction in the decision-making process.
We conducted a cross-sectional online survey with a representative sample of 900 US adults and assessed the participants' perceptions and attitudes toward disease actionability and severity, ranking hypothetical scenarios for these properties, and explored correlations with interest in learning test results.
Most respondents (>85%) rated actionability and severity as useful concepts; 46.6% indicated actionability alone would be adequate for decision making. Over half of them (53.8%) reported being very/extremely confident in their ability to score for actionability and severity. The participants' scoring of medical scenarios varied significantly between individuals. Scores for severity but not actionability were correlated with interest in learning genetic results. Subsets of the respondents projected wanting all results (30%) or no results (16%). The use of expert-created lists was acceptable to 43%.
The respondents from the general population were confident in making their own decisions. The responses suggested different priorities than current expert-driven approaches. The emphasis on binning genes may be missing a complementary, simplifying approach of grouping patients based upon their all/none interest in genomic results. This study illuminates important differences between the general public and genetic experts.
强调疾病可操作性和严重程度的框架正在不断发展,以满足整理全基因组分析结果的需求。这种方法代表了一种范式转变,从专注于一个或多个基因的咨询转向针对多种疾病的多个基因的咨询。普通人群的实证性意见尚付阙如,但对于理解如何在决策过程中最大限度地提高患者自主性和满意度似乎至关重要。
我们对900名美国成年人的代表性样本进行了横断面在线调查,评估了参与者对疾病可操作性和严重程度的看法和态度,对这些属性的假设情景进行了排名,并探讨了与了解检测结果兴趣的相关性。
大多数受访者(>85%)认为可操作性和严重程度是有用的概念;46.6%的人表示仅可操作性就足以用于决策。超过一半的人(53.8%)报告称对自己为可操作性和严重程度评分的能力非常/极其自信。参与者对医疗情景的评分在个体之间存在显著差异。严重程度而非可操作性的评分与了解基因结果的兴趣相关。部分受访者预计想要所有结果(30%)或不想要任何结果(16%)。43%的人接受使用专家创建的列表。
普通人群的受访者对自己做决定很有信心。这些回答表明了与当前专家驱动方法不同的优先事项。对基因进行分类的强调可能忽略了一种基于患者对基因组结果的全有/全无兴趣对患者进行分组的互补性、简化方法。这项研究揭示了普通公众和基因专家之间的重要差异。