Back to Search Start Over

Patient and public preferences for being recontacted with updated genomic results: a mixed methods study.

Authors :
Mighton, Chloe
Clausen, Marc
Sebastian, Agnes
Muir, Sarah M.
Shickh, Salma
Baxter, Nancy N.
Scheer, Adena
Glogowski, Emily
Schrader, Kasmintan A.
Thorpe, Kevin E.
Kim, Theresa H. M.
Lerner-Ellis, Jordan
Kim, Raymond H.
Regier, Dean A.
Bayoumi, Ahmed M.
Bombard, Yvonne
Source :
Human Genetics. Dec2021, Vol. 140 Issue 12, p1695-1708. 14p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Variants of uncertain significance (VUS) are frequently reclassified but recontacting patients with updated results poses significant resource challenges. We aimed to characterize public and patient preferences for being recontacted with updated results. A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was administered to representative samples of the Canadian public and cancer patients. DCE attributes were uncertainty, cost, recontact modality, choice of results, and actionability. DCE data were analyzed using a mixed logit model and by calculating willingness to pay (WTP) for types of recontact. Qualitative interviews exploring recontact preferences were analyzed thematically. DCE response rate was 60% (n = 1003, 50% cancer patient participants). 31 participants were interviewed (11 cancer patients). Interviews revealed that participants expected to be recontacted. Quantitatively, preferences for how to be recontacted varied based on certainty of results. For certain results, WTP was highest for being recontacted by a doctor with updates ($1075, 95% CI: $845, $1305) and for contacting a doctor to request updates ($1038, 95% CI: $820, $1256). For VUS results, WTP was highest for an online database ($1735, 95% CI: $1224, $2247) and for contacting a doctor ($1705, 95% CI: $1102, $2307). Qualitative data revealed that preferences for provider-mediated recontact were influenced by trust in healthcare providers. Preferences for a database were influenced by lack of trust in providers and desire for control. Patients and public participants support an online database (e.g. patient portal) to recontact for VUS, improving feasibility, and provider-mediated recontact for certain results, consistent with usual care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03406717
Volume :
140
Issue :
12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153293285
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00439-021-02366-0