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AEDR, H-Ala-Glu-Asp-Arg-OH

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Studies 54
Trials 4
2019 pubmed 28 citations

Secondary findings from next generation sequencing: Psychological and ethical issues. Family and patient perspectives.

Houdayer. F F; Putois. O O; Babonneau. M L ML; Chaumet. H H; Joly. L L; Juif. C C; Michon. C C CC; Staraci. S S; Cretin. E E; Delanoue. S S; Charron. P P; Chassagne. A A; Edery. P P; Gautier. E E; Lapointe. A S AS; Thauvin-Robinet. C C; Sanlaville. D D; Gargiulo. M M; Faivre. L L

Key Findings

  • A minority of participants favored receiving secondary findings for potential medical benefit.
  • The majority were concerned about psychological harm from learning extra genetic information.
  • Participants ranked clear explanations, autonomy, reflection time, and quality interactions as the most important factors for handling secondary findings.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers and self‑experimenters, the paper highlights that sharing extra genetic results can cause stress and should be managed with clear consent processes, optional participation, and ample time to consider the information. Implementing these communication safeguards may improve the ethical use of genomic data in personal health projects.

Summary

The study looked at how patients and families feel about getting extra genetic information (secondary findings) from DNA tests. Some people liked it for medical reasons, while many worried about the emotional impact. They also discussed how to explain these findings, give people choice, allow time to think, and improve doctor‑patient communication.

Abstract

Access to active search for actionable secondary findings (SF) in diagnostic practice is a major psychological and ethical issue for genomic medicine. In this study, we analyzed the preferences of patients and their families regarding SF and identified the reporting procedures necessary for informed consent. We interviewed parents of patients with undiagnosed rare diseases potentially eligible for exome sequencing and patients affected by the diseases listed in the ACMG recommendations. Four focus groups (FG) were formed: parents of patients with undiagnosed rare diseases (FG1, n = 5); patients with hereditary cancers (FG2, n = 10); patients with hereditary cardiac conditions (FG3, n = 3); and patients with metabolic diseases (FG4, n = 3). Psychologists presented three broad topics for discussion: 1. Favorable or not to SF access, 2. Reporting procedures, 3. Equity of access. Discussions were recorded and analyzed using simplified Grounded Theory. Overall, 8 participants declared being favorable to SF because of the medical benefit (mainly FG1); 11 were unfavorable because of the psychological consequences (mainly FG2, FG3, FG4); 2 were ambivalent. The possibility of looking for SF in minors was debated. The 4 key information-based issues for participants ranked as follows: explanation of SF issues, autonomy of choice, importance of a reflection period, and quality of interactions between patients and professionals. Examining equity of access to SF led to philosophical discussions on quality of life. In conclusion, individual experience and life context (circumstances) were decisive in participants' expectations and fears regarding access to SF. Additional longitudinal studies based on actual SF disclosure announcements are needed to establish future guidelines.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2019

Date

2019-06-29T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.ejmg.2019.103711

Citations

28

References

30