Telomere Center, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; Department of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Genetics Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA; National Institutes of Health Department of Bioethics, Clinical Center, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Nov;360:117303. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117303. Epub 2024 Sep 6.
Advances within the new genetics expand our understanding of the scope and presentation of inherited conditions, particularly to include incompletely penetrant and variably expressive conditions. These features can complicate patients' reproductive and family planning processes, in part because they expand the possibilities of life with an inherited condition. Despite many inquiries into reproductive planning with an inherited condition, accounts of experiential knowledge and reproductive planning fail to adequately describe the uncertainties experienced by people living with incompletely penetrant and variably expressive conditions. To address this gap, we conducted a qualitative, cross-sectional study using assemblage theory to characterize the impacts of experiential knowledge on reproductive planning for individuals living with Inborn Errors of Immunity (IEI) that exhibit incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity. Eligible participants were between ages 18 and 48, with a diagnosis of either GATA2 deficiency, PIK3CD gain-of-function disorder, or CTLA4 deficiency. Using an abductive thematic approach, attention was paid to the people, ideas, and non-human objects embedded within participants' accounts of disease experience and reproductive planning. Organized around the objects of genetic diagnosis, the body, and hypothetical children, this analysis illustrates how disease can be conceptualized as an assemblage of human and non-human objects which provoke numerous actions and affective engagements in reproductive planning. These engagements include renegotiation, uncertainty, and imagination. By emphasizing the distribution of agency and action across systems, processes, and relationships, assemblage theory invites novel ways of understanding the role of experiential knowledge on reproductive planning.
新遗传学的进展扩大了我们对遗传疾病范围和表现的理解,特别是包括不完全外显和可变表达的疾病。这些特征可能会使患者的生殖和家庭计划过程复杂化,部分原因是它们扩大了患有遗传疾病的生活的可能性。尽管有许多关于遗传性疾病生殖计划的调查,但关于经验知识和生殖计划的描述未能充分描述患有不完全外显和可变表达疾病的人的不确定性。为了解决这一差距,我们使用集合理论进行了一项定性的、横断面研究,以描述经验知识对具有不完全外显和可变表达的个体的生殖计划的影响,这些个体患有先天性免疫缺陷(IEI)。合格的参与者年龄在 18 岁至 48 岁之间,患有 GATA2 缺乏症、PIK3CD 功能获得性疾病或 CTLA4 缺乏症。使用归纳主题方法,关注参与者疾病经历和生殖计划描述中嵌入的人和思想以及非人类对象。本分析围绕遗传诊断、身体和假设儿童等对象组织,说明了疾病如何被概念化为一个由人类和非人类对象组成的集合,这些对象在生殖计划中引发了许多行动和情感参与。这些参与包括重新谈判、不确定性和想象。通过强调代理和行动在系统、过程和关系中的分布,集合理论邀请了一种新颖的方式来理解经验知识对生殖计划的作用。