| Literature DB >> 28286745 |
Caron M Molster1, Karla Lister1, Selina Metternick-Jones2, Gareth Baynam3, Angus John Clarke4, Volker Straub5, Hugh J S Dawkins6, Nigel Laing7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Consideration of expanded carrier screening has become an emerging issue for governments. However, traditional criteria for decision-making regarding screening programs do not incorporate all the issues relevant to expanded carrier screening. Further, there is a lack of consistent guidance in the literature regarding the development of appropriate criteria for government assessment of expanded carrier screening. Given this, a workshop was held to identify key public policy issues related to preconception expanded carrier screening, which governments should consider when deciding whether to publicly fund such programs.Entities:
Keywords: carrier screening; expanded carrier screening; genetic carrier screening; government; public policy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286745 PMCID: PMC5323409 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Range of perspectives covered in workshop presentations.
| Role | Focus of presentation |
|---|---|
| Clinical geneticist | Justifications for offering carrier screening, criteria for assessing public health screening, tensions in the goals of carrier screening, different social and cultural contexts in which screening can be offered, and queries regarding the conditions to screen |
| Screening policymaker | Criteria that guide government decision-making for population-based screening programs, including the Wilson and Jungner principles, and how these could be applied to preconception expanded carrier screening. Issues such as benefits and harms, public support, understanding the condition, testing, feasibility, and cost |
| Carrier screening program manager | Population and genetic conditions in Israel, national carrier screening programs, carrier rates in the population |
| Health economist | How health economics is used in decision-making processes, health technology assessment including cost–benefit analysis and cost-effectiveness, types of healthcare costs, and the kinds of health economic questions that arise in the context of developing screening programs |
| Health consumer advocate | What conditions to screen, benefits, challenges related to infrastructure, awareness, education, and engaging people |
| Ethicist | Commercial offers of expanded carrier screening and the range of conditions tested for, criteria to determine “severe” conditions, reproductive decision-making, individual, and social impact |
| Laboratory scientist | Carrier screening recommendations by professional bodies, test characteristics such as clinical utility and validity and analytic validity, technology that enables expanded carrier screening, condition/mutation selection, pathogenic variants detected and variants of uncertain significance, carrier frequency, education, and counseling |
| Disability rights advocate | Disability rights objections to expanded carrier screening, reproductive decisions after carrier screening, eugenics, |
| Clinical geneticist | The evolution of reproductive carrier screening, counseling, and education in the past and for expanded carrier screening |
Coverage of issues referred to in literature.
| Topic area | Issue raised by workshop participants | Issue |
|---|---|---|
| Condition | Should be clinically severe ( | The impact of the condition on individuals, families, and society needs to be understood ( It should be an important health problem ( The nature of the condition should influence the reproductive choices made by at-risk participants ( Conditions should have a predictable course ( The gene mutations that cause the condition should be understood, should have a valid clinical association with the phenotype/severity of the condition, and involve highly penetrant recessive inheritance ( There should be a high frequency of carriers in the population ( |
| Test | Need to assess test performance and accuracy across all gene mutations assayed ( Sensitivity ( Specificity ( Ability to determine meaningful residual risk for individuals who test negative ( Cost-effective ( | Non-invasive ( Accessible ( Straightforward interpretation of results ( Highly scalable to avoid limits to universal uptake ( Limited to gene mutations that have the highest likelihood of being/are clearly pathogenic ( Comply with laboratory guidelines that include quality control ( Inexpensive ( |
| Treatment | An effective treatment or intervention should be available for those identified as carriers ( | |
| Screening program | A clearly defined purpose and benefits of carrier screening ( Understanding of the potential harms of carrier screening, including physical, psychological, psychosocial, social, and ethical, which should all be low compared to benefits ( Equity and accessibility ( Defining the target population and understanding their needs ( Reaching, inviting, recruiting, and informing the target population, and informing and educating the general public, acknowledging that both groups probably having low awareness or knowledge of carrier screening and the diseases screened for ( Age to offer and timing of screening (i.e., individuals or couples) ( Participation that is voluntary and based on informed consent ( Consent processes and the provision of information, education, counseling, and support pre-screen for all participants and post-screen for those with positive test results, particularly about benefits and harms of screening, the test process, possible outcomes, interpretations of results, implications, and management options ( Education of healthcare providers ( Resources and infrastructure, including access to follow-up services such as preimplantation genetic diagnosis and prenatal diagnosis ( Public, political, and cultural attitudes toward and acceptability of carrier screening ( Economic evaluations, particularly of cost–benefit and cost-effectiveness ( Whether the program has been offered in the research setting and/or pilot studies and the outcomes of these studies ( | Accredited institutions and appropriately trained professionals ( Structure of the healthcare system (public/private) and implications for screening ( Monitoring, evaluation/review ( |