Division of General Internal Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Division of Pediatric Clinical and Translational Research, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
AJOB Empir Bioeth. 2021 Jul-Sep;12(3):179-189. doi: 10.1080/23294515.2021.1907475. Epub 2021 Apr 12.
The desire of parents to obtain a genetic diagnosis for their child with intellectual disability and associated symptoms has long been framed as a diagnostic odyssey, an arduous and sometimes perilous journey focused on the goal of identifying a cause for the child's condition. Semi-structured interviews (N = 60) were conducted with parents of children (N = 59, aged 2-24 years) with intellectual disability and/or developmental delay (IDD) who underwent genome sequencing at a single pediatric multispecialty clinic. Interviews were conducted after parents received their child's sequencing result (positive findings, negative findings, or variants of unknown significance). Thematic analysis was performed on all interviews. Parents reported that obtaining a genetic diagnosis was one important step in their overall goal of helping their child live their best life possible life. They intended to use the result as a tool to help their child by seeking the correct school placement and obtaining benefits and therapeutic services. For the parents of children with IDD, the search for a genetic diagnosis is best conceptualized as a part of parents' ongoing efforts to leverage various diagnoses to obtain educational and therapeutic services for their children. Cleaving parents' search for a genetic diagnosis from these broader efforts obscures the value that some parents place on a sequencing result in finding and tailoring therapies and services beyond the clinic. Interviews with parents reveal, therefore, that genomic sequencing is best understood as one important stage of an ongoing that largely takes place outside the clinic. Findings suggest the need to expand translational research efforts to contextualize a genetic diagnosis within parents' broader efforts to obtain educational and therapeutic services outside clinical contexts.
家长们一直希望为其患有智力障碍和相关症状的孩子获得基因诊断,这一愿望长期以来被描述为一个艰难的诊断之旅,一个以确定孩子病情病因这一目标为导向的艰苦且有时充满危险的旅程。对在一家儿科多专科诊所接受全基因组测序的 59 名(年龄 2-24 岁)智力障碍和/或发育迟缓(ID)儿童的家长进行了 60 次半结构式访谈。这些访谈是在家长收到孩子的测序结果(阳性发现、阴性发现或意义不明的变异)后进行的。对所有访谈进行了主题分析。家长们表示,获得基因诊断是他们帮助孩子尽可能过上最好生活的总体目标的重要一步。他们打算将结果用作工具,通过寻求正确的学校安置以及获得福利和治疗服务来帮助孩子。对于 ID 儿童的家长来说,寻找基因诊断最好被视为他们利用各种诊断为孩子获取教育和治疗服务的持续努力的一部分。如果将家长寻找基因诊断的行为与这些更广泛的努力割裂开来,就会忽视一些家长认为测序结果在寻找和定制治疗方法和服务方面具有的价值,而不仅仅局限于诊所内。因此,对家长的访谈表明,全基因组测序最好被理解为一个持续过程中的一个重要阶段,这个过程主要发生在诊所之外。研究结果表明,有必要扩大转化研究工作,使基因诊断与家长在临床环境之外获取教育和治疗服务的更广泛努力联系起来。