| Literature DB >> 26237256 |
Melissa Hill1, Ranjan Suri2, Edward F Nash3, Stephen Morris4, Lyn S Chitty5,6.
Abstract
As new technologies enable the development of non-invasive prenatal diagnosis (NIPD) for cystic fibrosis (CF), research examining stakeholder views is essential for the preparation of implementation strategies. Here, we compare the views of potential service users with those of health professionals who provide counselling for prenatal tests. A questionnaire incorporating a discrete choice experiment examined preferences for key attributes of NIPD and explored views on NIPD for CF. Adult patients (n = 92) and carriers of CF (n = 50) were recruited from one children's and one adult NHS specialist CF centre. Health professionals (n = 70) were recruited via an e-mail invitation to relevant professional bodies. The key attribute affecting service user testing preferences was no miscarriage risk, while for health professionals, accuracy and early testing were important. The uptake of NIPD by service users was predicted to be high and includes couples that would currently decline invasive testing. Many service users (47%) and health professionals (55.2%) thought the availability of NIPD for CF would increase the pressure to undergo prenatal testing. Most service users (68.5%) thought NIPD for CF should be offered to all pregnant women, whereas more health professionals (68.2%) thought NIPD should be reserved for known carrier couples. The implications for clinical practice are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cystic fibrosis; discrete choice experiment; non-invasive prenatal diagnosis (NIPD)
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237256 PMCID: PMC4449661 DOI: 10.3390/jcm3010176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Conditional logit analysis regression results for service users and health professionals.
| Attributes | Service users ( | Health professionals ( | Difference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient (95% CI) a | Coefficient (95% CI) b | ||||
| Accuracy | 0.160 (0.126 to 0.194) | <0.0001 | 0.378 (0.318 to 0.438) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
| Time of results | −0.108 (−0.149 to −0.067) | <0.0001 | −0.233 (−0.299 to −0.166) | <0.0001 | 0.0016 |
| No miscarriage risk | 1.960 (1.751 to 2.170) | <0.0001 | 0.938 (0.639 to 1.238) | <0.0001 | <0.0001 |
CI, confidence interval; a The number of observations = 3408; pseudo-R2 = 0.4966; b The number of observations = 1695; pseudo-R2 = 0.4746.
Conditional logit analysis regression results to compare service user subgroups. CF, cystic fibrosis.
| Attribute | Service user groups | Affected with CF: gender | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Affected with CF a ( | Carrier of CF b ( | Difference ( | Females c ( | Males d ( | Difference ( | |
| Coefficient (95% CI) | Coefficient (95% CI) | Coefficient (95% CI) | Coefficient (95% CI) | |||
| Accuracy | 0.154 (0.111 to 0.197) | 0.169 (0.113 to 0.224) | 0.6879 | 0.136 (0.0825 to 0.190) | 0.182 (0.119 to 0.245) | 0.2751 |
| Time of results | −0.113 (−0.167 to −0.060) | −0.102 (−0.166 to 0.037) * | 0.7890 | −0.094 (−0.167 to −0.021) * | −0.137 (−0.218 to −0.056) * | 0.4390 |
| No miscarriage risk | 2.149 (1.873 to 2.425) | 1.698 (1.373 to 2.024) | 0.0355 | 1.849 (1.507 to 2.191) | 2.512 (2.099 to 2.926) | 0.0154 |
CI, confidence interval; * Coefficient significant at <0.05; All other coefficients significant at <0.0001; a The number of observations = 2208; pseudo-R2 = 0.4961; b The number of observations = 1224; pseudo-R2 = 0.5221; c The number of observations = 1032; pseudo-R2 = 0.4234; d The number of observations = 1176; pseudo-R2 = 0.5692.
Marginal rates of substitution.
| Attribute | Number of weeks that respondents are prepared to wait | Reduction in accuracy (%) that respondents are prepared to accept | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Service users | Health professionals | Service users | Health professionals | |
| Test with no risk of miscarriage | 18.15 (1.960/−0.108) | 4.03 (0.938/−0.233) | 12.25 (1.960/0.160) | 2.48 (0.938/0.378) |
| Test with 5% greater accuracy | 7.41 (0.160/−0.108 × 5) | 8.11 (0.378/−0.233 × 5) | - | - |
| Early test | - | - | 0.68 (−0.108/0.160) | 0.62 (−0.233/0.378) |
Service user uptake of prenatal testing. NIPD, non-invasive prenatal diagnosis.
| Questions regarding uptake of prenatal testing | Total ( | Affected with CF ( | Carrier of CF ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.996 | ||||
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 57 (43.5%) | 37 (43.5%) | 20 (43.5%) | |
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 74 (56.4%) | 48 (56.5%) | 26 (56.5%) | |
| 0.288 | ||||
| To plan and prepare for the possible birth of a baby with CF | 33 (62.3%) | 22 (66.7%) | 11 (55.0%) | |
| To help make a decision about whether or not to continue the pregnancy | 17 (32.1%) | 9 (27.3%) | 8 (40.0%) | |
| 0.288 | ||||
| Because my family or my partner would want me to | 2 (3.8%) | 2 (6.0%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Because it is offered as part of the antenatal service | 1 (1.9%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (5.0%) | |
| Other | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | |
| 0.447 | ||||
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 63 (47.0%) | 43 (49.4%) | 20 (42.5%) | |
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 71 (53.0%) | 44 (50.5%) | 27 (57.4%) | |
|
| 0.466 | |||
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 71 (56.4%) | 52 (58.4%) | 19 (51.3%) | |
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 55 (43.7%) | 37 (41.6%) | 18 (48.6%) | |
| 0.252 | ||||
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 130 (94.9%) | 84 (93.3%) | 46 (97.9%) | |
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 7 (5.1%) | 6 (6.7%) | 1 (2.1%) | |
| 0.126 | ||||
| ≤£50 | 56 (41.2%) | 32 (36.0%) | 24 (51.1%) | |
| £100–200 | 53 (39.0%) | 40 (44.9%) | 13 (27.7%) | |
| ≥£200 | 14 (10.3%) | 6 (6.7%) | 8 (17.0%) | |
| Not prepared to pay | 13 (9.6%) | 11 (12.4%) | 2 (4.3%) |
Views on the pressure to have prenatal testing.
| Questions regarding pressure to have prenatal testing | Total service users ( | Affected with CF ( | Carriers of CF ( | Health professionals ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.075 | |||||
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 54 (39.4%) | 38 (43.2%) | 16 (32.7%) | 17 (25.8%) | |
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 83 (60.6%) | 50 (56.8%) | 33 (67.3%) | 49 (74.2%) | |
| Partner | 27 (26.7%) | 21 (27.6%) | 6 (24.0%) | 15 (32.6%) | |
| Family members | 29 (28.7%) | 22 (28.9%) | 7 (28.0%) | 13 (28.3%) | |
| Health professionals | 24 (23.8%) | 20 (26.3%) | 4 (16.0%) | 5 (10.9%) | |
| Society in general | 14 (13.9%) | 8 (10.5%) | 6 (24.0%) | 6 (13.0%) | |
| Your cultural or religious community | 1 (1.0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (4.0%) | 7 (15.2%) | |
| Other | 6 (5.9%) | 5 (6.6%) | 1 (4.0%) | 0 (0%) | |
| 0.088 | |||||
| Strongly Agree/Agree | 52 (42.6%) | 40 (46.5%) | 12 (33.3%) | 37 (56.1%) | |
| Strongly Disagree/Disagree | 70 (57.4%) | 46 (53.5%) | 24 (66.7%) | 29 (43.9%) |
* Participants could choose up to three responses.
Figure 1Who should be offered NIPD for CF?