1. Development and evaluation of patient-centred polygenic risk score reports for glaucoma screening.
- Author
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Hollitt GL, Hassall MM, Siggs OM, Craig JE, and Souzeau E
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Multifactorial Inheritance, Risk Assessment, Aged, Risk Factors, Genetic Testing, Genetic Risk Score, Glaucoma genetics, Glaucoma diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Polygenic risk scores (PRS), which provide an individual probabilistic estimate of genetic susceptibility to develop a disease, have shown effective risk stratification for glaucoma onset. However, there is limited best practice evidence for reporting PRS and patient-friendly reports for communicating PRS effectively are lacking. Here we developed patient-centred PRS reports for glaucoma screening based on the literature, and evaluated them with participants using a qualitative research approach., Methods: We first reviewed existing PRS reports and literature on probabilistic risk communication. This informed the development of a draft glaucoma screening PRS report for a hypothetical high risk individual from the general population. We designed three versions of the report to illustrate risk using a pictograph, a pie chart and a bell curve. We then conducted semi-structured interviews to assess preference of visual risk communication aids, understanding of risk, content, format and structure of the reports. Participants were invited from an existing study, which aims to evaluate the clinical validity of glaucoma PRS among individuals > 50 years from the general population. Numeracy and literacy levels were assessed., Results: We interviewed 12 individuals. The cohort was highly educated (42% university education), all were European and 50% were female. Numeracy (mean 2.1 ± 0.9, range 0 to 3), graph literacy (mean 2.8 ± 0.8, range 0 to 4) and genetic literacy (mean 24.2 ± 6.2, range - 20 to + 46) showed a range of levels. We analysed the reports under three main themes: visual preferences, understanding risk and reports formatting. The visual component was deemed important to understanding risk, with the pictograph being the preferred visual risk representation, followed by the pie chart and the bell curve. Participants expressed preference for absolute risk in understanding risk, along with the written content explaining the results. The importance of follow-up recommendations and time to glaucoma onset were deemed important. Participants expressed varied opinions in the level of information and the colours used, which informed revisions of the report., Conclusions: Our study revealed preferences for reporting PRS information in the context of glaucoma screening, to support the development of clinical PRS reporting. Further research is needed to assess PRS communication in other groups representative of target populations and with other target audiences (e.g. referring clinicians), and its potential psychosocial impact in the wider community., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: This study was approved by the Southern Adelaide Clinical Human Research Ethics Committee (SAC HREC, ethics approval 2020/HRE00968). All participants provided informed written consent. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: JEC is a co-inventor on a patent application for the use of genetic risk scores in predicting glaucoma risk. OMS, MMH and JEC hold equity in Seonix Pty Ltd, which has commercialised a clinical PRS test for glaucoma. GLH, ES: None., (© 2025. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2025
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