| Literature DB >> 24022395 |
M Martyn1, V Anderson, A Archibald, R Carter, J Cohen, M Delatycki, S Donath, J Emery, J Halliday, M Hill, L Sheffield, H Slater, F Tassone, S Younie, S Metcalfe.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the leading cause of inherited intellectual and developmental disability. Policy development relating to carrier screening programmes for FXS requires input from large studies examining not only test uptake but also psychosocial aspects. This study will compare carrier screening in pregnant and non-pregnant populations, examining informed decision-making, psychosocial issues and health economics. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Pregnant and non-pregnant women are being recruited from general practices and obstetric services. Women receive study information either in person or through clinic mail outs. Women are provided pretest counselling by a genetic counsellor and make a decision about testing in their own time. Data are being collected from two questionnaires: one completed at the time of making the decision about testing and the second 1 month later. Additional data are gathered through qualitative interviews conducted at several time points with a subset of participating women, including all women with a positive test result, and with staff from recruiting clinics. A minimum sample size of 500 women/group has been calculated to give us 88% power to detect a 10% difference in test uptake and 87% power to detect a 10% difference in informed choice between the pregnant and non-pregnant groups. Questionnaire data will be analysed using descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression models. Interview data will be thematically analysed. Willingness-to-pay and cost effectiveness analyses will also be performed. Recruitment started in July 2009 and data collection will be completed by December 2013. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval has been granted by the Universities of Melbourne and Western Australia and by recruiting clinics, where required. Results will be reported in peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations and through a website http://www.fragilexscreening.net.au. The results of this study will make a significant contribution to discussions about the wider introduction of population carrier screening for FXS.Entities:
Keywords: Genetics; Public Health
Year: 2013 PMID: 24022395 PMCID: PMC3773647 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003660
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Programme logic model to investigate fragile X syndrome carrier screening.
Figure 2Overview of study protocol. *See table 1 for details of measures included in questionnaires 1 and 2.
Questionnaire measures and scales
| Measure/scale | Description | Q1 | Q2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | 10 item scale containing questions on fragile X syndrome (true/false/unsure). A score of 7 or higher is classified as ‘good’ knowledge. | √ | √ |
| Attitudes | 5 item scale (0–4) used to assess a woman's attitude to screening (beneficial/harmful; important/unimportant, bad thing/good thing, pleasant/unpleasant, worrying/not worrying). Dichotomous scale: women are classified as having a positive (11–20) or a negative (0–10) attitude towards screening. | √ | |
| Multidimensional model of informed choice | Defines an informed choice as a decision made with ‘good’ knowledge, which is consistent with a person's values. Incorporates three dimensions: knowledge, attitudes and uptake. Dichotomous scale: ‘informed choice’ or ‘not informed choice’. | √ | |
| Deliberation | 6 item scale measuring the extent to which a decision is deliberated on a 5 point Likert scale (0 = strongly agree—4 = strongly disagree). Dichotomous scale: responses below the midpoint (11 or under) classified as not deliberated and those at or above the midpoint as deliberated. | √ | |
| Decisional conflict scale | 16 item scale measuring uncertainty about a course of action on a 5 point Likert scale (0 = strongly agree—4 = strongly disagree). Mean scores are reported with higher scores indicating higher decisional conflict. Scores range from 0 to 100 with scores over 37.5 associated with decision delay or uncertainty about implementation. | √ | |
| Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS-21) | 21 item scale divided into 3 subscales measuring depression, anxiety and stress. Responses are classified into 5 categories: 1 (normal) to 5 (extremely severe). | √ | √ |
| State Trait Anxiety Index (STAI-6) | 6 item scale measuring state anxiety. The maximum score is 80 with scores 31–49 considered as average and scores over 50 indicating elevated state anxiety. | √ | √ |
| Health belief | 16 items measuring the importance of a range of factors which may influence decision-making: perceived benefits; perceived susceptibility; perceived severity and perceived barriers in a woman's decision to accept or decline testing for FXS. | √ | |
| Decisional regret | 5 item scale measuring distress or remorse after a healthcare decision using a 5 point Likert scale (0–4). Scores range from 0–100 with higher scores indicating a higher level of regret. | √ | |
| Willingness-to-pay (WTP) | 2 questions (piloted) that address WTP and gross family income. Income question has six income ranges with a tick box. WTP question has 11 item income values with a tick box and sub-questions that address: (1) utility of test (information only or information plus decision-making); and (2) who receives a test result (recipient only or recipient plus shared with health share professionals). | √ | |
| Sociodemographics | Marital status, age, parity, reproductive life-stage, education, occupation, postcode. | √ |
Overview of interview schedule
| Time-point | Interview type | Interview description | Selection |
|---|---|---|---|
| After return of Q1, before Q2 and result sent (if tested) | Decision-making interviews | Knowledge, attitudes, factors influencing decision-making, the decision-making process, and perspectives on decisions | Non-pregnant women only; mix of tested and untested women |
| One month after return of Q2 | Programme evaluation interviews (women) | Motivations for participating, factors influencing decision-making, experience of participating in the study including genetic counselling, reflections on decision and views on screening | Mix of tested and untested women from each clinic, including all women with positive test results. Sociodemographic data examined to ensure that selected women are representative of the overall sample |
| After completion of recruitment at any given clinic | Programme evaluation interviews (clinic staff) | Attitudes to population carrier screening for fragile X syndrome (FXS), knowledge of FXS, reflections on offering FXS carrier screening at their clinic, and feedback on the study | Mix of staff from each clinic involved in recruitment |
| 1 year after return of Q2 | 1 year follow-up | Motivations for screening, interpretation of result, perceived value of result, impact of result and reflections on decision | All women with a test-positive result (ie, GZ, PM or FM) |