Department of Acute & Tertiary Care, School of Nursing, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Center for Bioethics and Health Law, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Neurotherapeutics. 2021 Apr;18(2):673-685. doi: 10.1007/s13311-021-01047-0. Epub 2021 Apr 15.
This article examines ethical issues associated with the return of AD neuroimaging results to cognitively symptomatic individuals. Following a review of research on patient and study partner reactions to learning the results of biomarker testing for AD, we examine ethical issues that will be of increasing significance as the field transitions to an era wherein disease-modifying treatments for AD become available. We first review the ethical justification for returning AD biomarker results to individuals who desire them. We then address a more novel question: whether, and to what extent, clinicians or clinical researchers should influence the decisions of individuals who are potentially reluctant to learn their AD imaging results. We argue that in many cases, it is ethically correct to explore, and sometimes alter, factors that may be inhibiting one's desire to know these test results. Our argument is grounded in the premise that having more complete information about changes that may be happening in one's brain will generally yield more informed participation in decisions about one's own care, thereby promoting autonomy. Finally, on the assumption that we have established that it is frequently ethically correct to try to communicate testing information, we examine considerations regarding (not whether but) how this is best accomplished, discussing the concept of responsible transparency. We suggest that both (1) explorations of why one may or may not want to learn results of AD biomarker imaging and (2) the responsible return of such test results is best accomplished using a transactional model of communication.
这篇文章探讨了与向认知症状个体返还 AD 神经影像学结果相关的伦理问题。在回顾了关于患者和研究伙伴对 AD 生物标志物检测结果学习反应的研究之后,我们考察了随着该领域向 AD 疾病修饰治疗可获得的时代过渡,将日益凸显的伦理问题。我们首先回顾了向希望获得 AD 生物标志物结果的个体返还这些结果的伦理依据。然后,我们探讨了一个更具创新性的问题:临床医生或临床研究人员是否应该以及在何种程度上影响那些可能不愿意了解其 AD 影像学结果的个体的决策。我们认为,在许多情况下,探索并有时改变可能抑制人们了解这些检测结果的意愿的因素在伦理上是正确的。我们的论点基于这样一个前提,即更全面地了解可能在自己大脑中发生的变化,通常会更明智地参与自己护理的决策,从而促进自主性。最后,假设我们已经确定,尝试传达测试信息通常在伦理上是正确的,那么我们将考察有关(不是是否,而是)如何最好地完成此操作的考虑因素,讨论负责任透明度的概念。我们建议,(1)探索一个人可能想要或不想要了解 AD 生物标志物成像结果的原因,以及(2)使用沟通的交易模型来负责任地返还此类测试结果,是最佳的方法。