| Literature DB >> 26938633 |
France Légaré1,2,3, Hubert Robitaille1, Claire Gane1, Jessica Hébert1, Michel Labrecque1,2, François Rousseau1,4,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Knowledge translation (KT) interventions are attempts to change behavior in keeping with scientific evidence. While genetic tests are increasingly available to healthcare consumers in the clinic, evidence about their benefits is unclear and decisions about genetic testing are thus difficult for all parties.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26938633 PMCID: PMC4777394 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0150123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Quality assessment of included studies.
| Author year | Risk of bias for six criteria | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Unclear | High | |
| 0 | 4 | 2 | |
| 2 | 4 | 0 | |
| 2 | 4 | 0 | |
| 1 | 4 | 1 | |
| 4 | 1 | 1 | |
| 3 | 2 | 1 | |
| 2 | 4 | 0 | |
| 4 | 2 | 0 | |
| 1 | 2 | 0 | |
| 2 | 1 | 3 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
| 2 | 1 | 3 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
| 1 | 5 | 0 | |
| 4 | 2 | 0 | |
| 4 | 1 | 1 | |
| 2 | 3 | 1 | |
| 4 | 2 | 0 | |
| 4 | 1 | 1 | |
| 3 | 2 | 1 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
| 1 | 5 | 0 | |
| 6 | 0 | 0 | |
| 2 | 4 | 0 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
| 3 | 3 | 0 | |
* The table shows a count of how many of the six quality criteria were judged as having “low, unclear or high” risk of bias. Six quality criteria: sequence generation; allocation concealment; blinding of participants, personnel and outcome assessors; incomplete outcome date; selective outcome reporting; and other sources of bias.
Fig 1Flow diagram of study selection.
Study and intervention characteristics.
| First author, Year | Cochrane Group | Authors of Cochrane review | Objective of study | Rationale | Main outcome measures | Role of genetic testing in study | Type of intervention | Tool(s) used for the intervention | Target of intervention | Clinical context | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPOC | O’Brien, 2007 [ | To assess 2 brief training interventions to improve obstetricians’ and midwives’ explanations to patients of a routine prenatal screening test | To improve health behavior/knowledge/wellbeing | Information-giving, communication skills and knowledge of prenatal screening | Genetic outcome (screening) | Educational outreach visits | Interpersonal, Paper, Audio/visual | Professionals(obstetricians and midwives) | Fetal anomalies | UK | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To evaluate the long-term (12 months) impact of genetic susceptibility biomarkers feedback on smoking behavior change and symptoms of depression | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Self-reported 30-day smoking abstinence rates and depression after 12 months | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Interpersonal | Patient (smokers) | Lung cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To evaluate the impact of alternate strategies for pretest education and counseling on decision-making regarding BRCA1 testing among women at low to moderate risk who have a family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Knowledge of inherited cancer and BRCA1 test characteristics, perceived risk, perceived benefits, limitations and risks of BRCA1 testing, and testing intentions at 1-month follow-up | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, Paper, Audio/visual | Patient (women with family history of breast cancer) | Breast and ovarian cancer | USA | |
| EPOC | Ivers, 2012 [ | 1) To investigate the feasibility of improving screening for carriers of hemoglobin disorders in general practice by using a nurse facilitator to work with primary care teams and the relevant hematology laboratories; 2) to identify problems in communication between all those involved in delivering the service, and to implement solutions | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Change in number of requests for screening tests for hemoglobin disorders | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention and diagnosis) | Audit and feedback | Interpersonal, Paper, Audio/visual | Patient and Professional (general practitioners, practice nurses) | Hemoglobin disorders | UK | |
| CCRG | Stacey,2014 [ | To compare face-to-face education and counseling by a genetic counselor with education by an interactive computer program, assessing the effects of each on knowledge of breast cancer genetics and intent to undergo genetic testing | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Knowledge about breast cancer genetics and intent to undergo genetic testing at baseline and following the educational interventions | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, Computer/ interactive | Patient (women with family history of breast cancer) | Breast cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To examine whether a brief educational booklet regarding BRCA1/BRCA2 testing would influence knowledge, attitudes, and interest in testing among Ashkenazi Jewish women from the general population | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Knowledge and interest in BRCA 1/2 gene testing at one-month follow-up | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Decision aids | Paper | Patient (Ashkenazi Jewish women from general population) | Breast and ovarian cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Edwards, 2013 [ | To test the effects of breast cancer counseling on interest in pursuing genetic testing in women with a family history of breast cancer | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Awareness, candidacy and interest in genetic testing at 6-month follow-up | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Personalized risk communication | Interpersonal | Patient (women with family history of breast cancer) | Breast cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To assess whether a multicomponent intervention that included feedback about genetic susceptibility to lung cancer increased risk perceptions and rates of smoking cessation compared with a standard cessation intervention | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Self-reported as having smoked no cigarettes in the prior 7 days at the 6- and 12-month follow-ups and sustained abstinence | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Interpersonal, Paper | Patient(African-American smokers with low income) | Lung cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Edwards, 2013 [ | To compare tailored print material vs. non-tailored print material to facilitate informed genetic testing decisions | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Knowledge about genetic testing, perceived risk, expert risk estimate, accuracy of perceived risk, worries about being a mutation carrier and testing intention | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Personalized risk communication | Paper | Patient (women with personal history of breast or ovarian cancer) | Breast and ovarian cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To evaluate decision analysis as a technique to facilitate women’s decision-making about prenatal diagnosis for Down syndrome using measures of effective decision-making | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Test decision, subjective expected utilities, knowledge, informed decision-making, risk perception, decisional conflict, anxiety, perceived usefulness and directiveness of consultation information one month after receipt of a diagnosis test and/or the 19-week scan result | Genetic outcome (screening) | Decision aids | Paper | Patient (women receiving a screen-positive maternal serum screening test for Down syndrome) | Fetal anomalies | UK | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To compare the effectiveness of a computer-based decision aid with standard genetic counseling for educating women about BRCA1 and BRCA2 genetic testing | To improve health behavior/wellbeing and to increase uptake of genetic testing | Participants’ knowledge, risk perception, intention to undergo genetic testing, testing decision (at 1 and 6 months), decisional conflict, satisfaction with decision, anxiety, and satisfaction with the intervention after the counseling | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, Computer/ interactive | Patient (women with personal or familial history of breast cancer) | Breast cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | 1) To compare an interactive multimedia decision aid with a leaflet and a video to give information about prenatal screening for Down syndrome and 2) to determine the women’s acceptance of interactive multimedia decision aid | To improve health behavior /wellbeing and to increase uptake of genetic testing | Women’s final uptake of the screening test (integrated or serum screening) for Down syndrome and women’s initial decision, understanding and satisfaction with the information that they had received | Genetic outcome (screening) | Decision aids | Audio/visual, Computer/ interactive | Patient (pregnant women considering whether to undergo prenatal screening for Down syndrome) | Fetal anomalies | China | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To investigate the psychological impact of using genetic testing to make or confirm a clinical diagnosis | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Perception of control over family hypercholesterolemia, cholesterol, heart disease, and fatalism about family hypercholesterolemia | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Interpersonal | Patient (adults clinically diagnosed with definite or possible heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia) | Familial hypercholesterolemia | UK | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To evaluate shared decision-making information for BRCA1/2 mutation carriers who have to make a choice between screening and prophylactic surgery for breast and/or ovaries | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Well-being treatment choice and decision-related outcomes 3 and 9 months after the test result | Genetic diagnosis (mastectomy intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, paper, audio/visual | Patient (women considering to undergo genetic testing for breast cancer) | Breast and ovarian cancer | The Netherlands | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To compare which counseling methods (individual vs. group vs. use of a decision aid) are effective in prenatal diagnosis counseling for women of advanced maternal age (≥ 35 years) and their partners | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Knowledge, decisional conflict, state of anxiety, satisfaction, use of prenatal diagnosis, and pregnancy outcomes | Genetic outcome (screening intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, Audio/visual | Patient (advanced age women referred for prenatal screening) | Fetal anomalies | Canada | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To evaluate a novel, theory-based approach to help guide women in making informed decisions about pursuing breast cancer genetic testing | To increase uptake of genetic testing | Intention to obtain genetic testing, knowledge, perceived risk at 2-week, 2-month and 6-month follow-up | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, Paper | Patient (women calling the NCI’s Cancer Information Service) | Breast cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Edwards, 2013 [ | To assess the effect of interventions (in person vs. by telephone vs. control) on the interest in breast cancer risk counseling and genetic testing in women at all risk levels | To improve health behavior/wellbeing and decrease uptake of genetic testing | Women’s cancer worry, risk perceptions, and intentions to obtain breast cancer screening and interest in pursuing genetic testing at 3-months follow-up | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention) | Personalized risk communication | Interpersonal, audio/visual | Patient (women of general population) | Breast cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To evaluate whether feedback of genetic information regarding an L-myc polymorphism, identified as impacting on tobacco-related cancer risk, has an influence on smoking cessation | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Smoking cessation at 3- and 9-months follow-ups | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Interpersonal, paper | Patient (smokers) | Lung cancer | Japan | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To examine whether apolipoprotein E genotype and numerical risk estimate disclosure to asymptomatic individuals at high risk for Alzheimer disease alters health behaviors | To improve health behavior /wellbeing | Self-reported Alzheimer disease-specific health behavior change (changes in diet, in exercise and in medications and/or vitamins) 1 year after disclosure | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Paper | Patient (relative or person living with person affected by Alzheimer disease) | Alzheimer disease | USA | |
| CCRG | Gurol-Urganci, 2012 [ | To study the effect of fast reporting by mobile phone short-message service (SMS) on anxiety levels in women undergoing prenatal biochemical screening for Down syndrome | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Anxiety levels before prenatal screen testing, before the appointed clinic and 3 days after the appointed clinic | Genetic outcome (screening) | Mobile phone messaging | Computer/ interactive, Interpersonal | Patient (pregnant women undergoing prenatal screening for Down’s syndrome) | Fetal anomalies | Taiwan | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To explore the impact of GSTM1 genetic testing on motivation to quit smoking | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Intention and motivation to quit smoking within the next 6 months, depression, anxiety, perceived risk of lung cancer and comprehension of genetic test results at one-week follow-up | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Interpersonal, Paper | Patient (smokers) | Lung cancer | UK | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To measure the effectiveness of a tailored decision aid designed specifically to assist individuals to make informed decisions regarding genetic testing for hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Reading the materials, decisional conflict, knowledge of genetic testing, multidimensional measure of informed choice, family involvement, impact of event, hospital anxiety and depression, genetic testing decision and decision regret | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Paper | Patient (persons considering undergoing testing for colorectal cancer) | Colorectal cancer | Australia | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To measure the effectiveness of a tailored decision aid designed to help women make informed decisions about genetic testing for breast/ovarian cancer risk | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Reading the materials, decisional conflict, knowledge of genetic testing, multidimensional measure of informed choice, family involvement, impact of event, hospital anxiety and depression, genetic testing decision and decision regret | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Paper | Patient (women considering undergoing testing for breast cancer) | Breast and ovarian cancer | Australia | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To evaluate the impact of a decision aid for women considering genetic testing for breast/ovarian cancer risk given during genetic counseling | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Reading the materials, decisional conflict, knowledge of genetic testing, multidimensional measure of informed choice, family involvement, impact of event, hospital anxiety and depression, genetic testing decision and decision regret | Genetic outcome (genotyping intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Paper | Patient (women considering undergoing testing for breast cancer) | Breast and ovarian cancer | Australia | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To estimate the effect of a computerized, interactive prenatal testing decision tool on prenatal testing decision making | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Knowledge, risk awareness, intervention satisfaction, decisional conflict, and use of invasive diagnostic testing | Genetic outcome (screening intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Computer/interactive | Patient (pregnant women) | Fetal anomalies | USA | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To test a computer-based interactive decision aid designed to help BRCA1/2 mutation carriers make decisions about risk reducing mastectomy | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Final management decision, decisional conflict, decisional satisfaction and receipt of risk reduction at 1-, 6- and 12- months post randomization | Genetic diagnosis (mastectomy intention, as an indirect measure of the use of a DA) | Decision aids | Computer/interactive | Patient (women who carry BRCA1/BRCA2 mutation) | Breast and ovarian cancer | USA | |
| CCRG | Marteau, 2010 [ | To examine the effects of genotype notification of an oncogene (Lmyc) genotype to smokers on their smoking cessation behavior | To improve health behavior/wellbeing | Self-reported smoking cessation rate 1 year after the enrollment | Genetic intervention (prevention and genotyping) | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Paper | Patient (smokers) | Lung cancer | Japan | |
| CCRG | Stacey, 2014 [ | To evaluate the effects of an information film on making an informed choice regarding Down syndrome screening and women’s knowledge and experience of information | To improve health behavior/wellbeing and to increase uptake of genetic testing | Informed choice (attitudes towards Down syndrome screening, knowledge about Down syndrome and Down syndrome screening and uptake of combined ultrasound biochemical screening) at week 27 | Genetic outcome (screening) | Decision aids | Interpersonal, Paper, Audio/visual | Patient (pregnant women considering undergoing prenatal testing) | Fetal anomalies | Sweden |
* Studies are presented in chronological order (1995–2012).
† Cochrane Groups: EPOC: Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Group; CCRG: Consumers and Communication Review Group.
Effectiveness of interventions on decision-making outcomes.
| First Author, Year | Cost effectiveness | Knowledge translation intervention | Effectiveness of the knowledge translation intervention as reported by authors of the primary study | Results of trial as reported in the systematic review (intervention effective/not effective) | Do trial results match results of systematic review? | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | Educational outreach to health professionals | Effective for provider’s knowledge(+ at 3 months) | Effective for providers’ information-giving & communication skills (+ immediately after the intervention) | Effective | Yes | ||||
| N/A | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Effective for quitting smoking attempt (+ at 12 months) | Effective for depression (- at 2 months) | Not effective | No | ||||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge (+ at 1 month) | Not effective | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | ||
| N/A | Audit and feedback | Effective for number of screening test requests (+ at 1 year) | Effective | Yes | |||||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge (+ before and after intervention | Effective for intent to undergo testing (+ before and after the intervention) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | No | ||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge (+ at 1 month) | Not effective | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | ||
| N/A | Personalized risk communication | Effective for awareness (+ at 6 months) | Effective for interest in genetic testing and candidacy for testing (+ at 6 months) | Effective | Yes | ||||
| Not effective | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Effective for smoking cessation (+ at 6 months) | Not effective | No | |||||
| N/A | Personalized risk communication | Effective for knowledge about genetic testing (+ at 2 weeks) | Not effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for risk perception (+ at 1 month) | Not effective | Effective for decisional conflict (+ at 1 month) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge and perceived risk (+ immediately after the intervention) | Effective for intention to undergo genetic testing (+ immediately after the intervention) | Effective for anxiety (+ immediately after the intervention) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | No | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Not effective | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |||
| N/A | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Effective for perceived control (+ at 1 week) | Not effective | No | |||||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for decision-related outcomes (+ at 9 months); | Effective for well-being (+ at 9 months, but not effective at 3 months) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | No | ||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge (+ at post-counseling) | Not effective | Effective for decisional conflict and satisfaction (+ at post-counseling) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Not effective | Effective for intention to obtain genetic testing (+ at 6 months) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | No | ||
| N/A | Personalized risk communication | Effective for risk perceptions (+ at 3 months) | Effective for interest in genetic testing (+ at 3 months) | Effective for cancer worry (+ at 3 months) | Yes | ||||
| N/A | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Effective for smoking cessation (+ at 9 months) | Not effective | No | |||||
| N/A | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Effective for health behavior specific to Alzheimer disease prevention (+ at 12 months) | Not effective | No | |||||
| N/A | Mobile phone messaging | Effective for anxiety (+ before the appointed clinic) | Effective | N/A | |||||
| N/A | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Not effective | Effective for cigarettes smoked per day and motivation to quit smoking (+ at 1 week) | Effective for depression (+ at 1 week) | Not effective | No | |||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge score and informed choice (+ at 1 week) | Not effective | Effective for decisional conflict (+ at 1 week) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge score (+ at 1 week) | Not effective | Effective for decisional conflict (+ at 1 week) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge (+ immediately after the intervention) | Not effective | Effective for decisional conflict (+ after the intervention) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for knowledge (+ immediately after the intervention) | Not effective | Effective for intervention satisfaction and decisional conflict (+ immediately after the intervention) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | Yes | |
| N/A | Decision Aids | Effective for management decision (+ longitudinal impact at 1, 6 and 12 months) | Effective for decisional conflict (+ longitudinal impact at 1, 6 and 12 months) | Effective | Not effective | Effective | No | ||
| N/A | Communicating DNA-based disease risk estimates | Not effective | Not effective | Yes | |||||
| N/A | Decision Aids | Not effective | Effective | Not effective | Effective | No | |||
* Studies are presented in chronological order (1995–2012).
†N/A: not applicable (outcome either not assessed, or because the outcomes assessed were not the same).
§ Effectiveness statistically significant (p≤0.05) or not statistically significantly (p>0.05).
Effectiveness of each type of intervention on assessed outcomes types.*
| Intervention type | Studies reporting effectiveness on outcome-type A / total studies reporting on outcome-type A | Studies reporting effectiveness on outcome-type B / total studies reporting on outcome-type B | Studies reporting effectiveness on outcome-type C / total studies reporting on outcome-type C |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9/10 | 5/15 | 9/9 | |
| 0/1 | 6/7 | 2/2 | |
| 0/0 | 1/1 | 0/0 | |
| 3/3 | 2/3 | 1/2 | |
| 0/0 | 0/0 | 1/1 | |
| 1/1 | 1/1 | 0/0 |
*Fractions are number of studies reporting effectiveness on an outcome-type / total number of studies that assessed that outcome-type (not mutually exclusive). A = knowledge-related outcomes; B = behavior-related outcomes; C = wellbeing-related outcomes; N = total number of studies that assessed this type of intervention.