| Literature DB >> 28667567 |
Rachèl V van Schendel1, G C M Lieve Page-Christiaens2, Lean Beulen3, Caterina M Bilardo4, Marjon A de Boer5, Audrey B C Coumans6, Brigitte H W Faas7, Irene M van Langen8, Klaske D Lichtenbelt9, Merel C van Maarle10, Merryn V E Macville11, Dick Oepkes12, Eva Pajkrt13, Lidewij Henneman14.
Abstract
Increasingly, high-risk pregnant women opt for non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) instead of invasive diagnostic testing. Since NIPT is less accurate than invasive testing, a normal NIPT result might leave women less reassured. A questionnaire study was performed among pregnant women with elevated risk for fetal aneuploidy based on first-trimester combined test (risk ≥1:200) or medical history, who were offered NIPT in the nationwide Dutch TRIDENT study. Pre- and post-test questionnaires (n = 682) included measures on: experiences with NIPT procedure, feelings of reassurance, anxiety (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, STAI), child-related anxiety (PRAQ-R), and satisfaction. The majority (96.1%) were glad to have been offered NIPT. Most (68.5%) perceived the waiting time for NIPT results (mean: 15 days, range 5-32) as (much) too long. Most women with a normal NIPT result felt reassured (80.9%) or somewhat reassured (15.7%). Levels of anxiety and child-related anxiety were significantly lower after receiving a normal NIPT result as compared to the moment of intake (p < 0.001). Women with inadequate health literacy or a medical history (e.g. previous child with trisomy) experienced significantly higher post-test-result anxiety (Mean (M) STAI = 31.6 and 30.0, respectively) compared to those with adequate health literacy (M = 28.6) and no medical history (M = 28.6), indicating these women might benefit from extra information and/or guidance when communicating NIPT test-results. Introducing NIPT as an alternative to invasive testing, led to an offer that satisfied and largely reassured high-risk pregnant women.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; NIPT; Non-invasive Prenatal Testing; Prenatal Screening; Reassurance; Satisfaction
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28667567 PMCID: PMC5672853 DOI: 10.1007/s10897-017-0118-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Genet Couns ISSN: 1059-7700 Impact factor: 2.537
Characteristics of participants, N = 682
| Characteristics |
|
|---|---|
| Age (years), | |
| ≤ 25 | 11 (1.6) |
| 26–35 | 285 (41.9) |
| ≥ 36 | 385 (56.5) |
| Level of educationa | |
| Low | 42 (6.2) |
| Intermediate | 202 (29.6) |
| High | 438 (64.2) |
| Ethnicityb
| |
| Dutch | 528 (78.0) |
| Other Western | 75 (11.1) |
| Non-Western | 74 (10.9) |
| Religionc
| |
| None | 441 (64.9) |
| Christian | 201 (29.6) |
| Muslim | 16 (2.4) |
| Other | 22 (3.2) |
| Health literacyd
| |
| Inadequate | 46 (6.8) |
| Adequate | 635 (93.2) |
| Gestational age (weeks), | |
| 10–20 | 623 (91.6) |
| 20–30 | 45 (6.6) |
| 30–40 | 5 (0.7) |
| No longer pregnant (miscarriage/TOP) | 7 (1.0) |
| Parity, | |
| nulliparous | 407 (37.7) |
| multiparous | 672 (62.3) |
| Indication for NIPT, | |
| Elevated risk FCT | 589 (86.5) |
| Medical historye | 92 (13.5) |
| A priori risk (FCT risk), | |
| ≥ 1:10 | 30 (5.3) |
| 1:11–1:100 | 267 (47.2) |
| 1:101–1:200 | 267 (47.2) |
| Test-result NIPT | |
| Normal result | 656 (96.2) |
| Trisomy 21 | 14 (2.1) |
| Trisomy 18 | 3 (0.4) |
| Trisomy 13 | 1 (0.1) |
| Other trisomy | 8 (1.2) |
TOP termination of pregnancy, FCT first trimester combined test, NA not applicable
aLow: elementary school, lower level of secondary school, lower vocational training; Medium: higher level of secondary school, intermediate vocational training, High: high vocational training, university (Statistics Netherlands 2016)
bEthnicity was categorized as Dutch, Other Western or Non-Western by the following algorithm: Dutch if both parents were born in the Netherlands; Other Western if at least one of their parents was born in Europe (excluding Turkey), North-America, Oceania, Indonesia or Japan; and non-Western if at least one of their parents was born in Africa, Latin-America, Asia (excluding Indonesia and Japan) and Turkey. If both parents were born abroad, then by country of the mother (Statistics Netherlands 2016)
cChristian: Calvinism, Protestantism, Roman-Catholic, Reformed, Baptism. Other: e.g. Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist
dInadequate health literacy if answered other than ‘never’ or ‘occasionally’ on one or more items, based on (Chew et al. 2004)
eE.g. a previous child with a trisomy 21, 18 or 13
Fig. 1Women’s feelings towards the time waiting for NIPT results, N = 682
Fig. 2a Mean STAI scores at intake (Q1) and after receiving a normal NIPT test-result (Q2), N = 656. *Total STAI score (range 20–80). b Mean PRAQ-R scores at intake (Q1) and after receiving a normal NIPT test-result (Q2), N = 653. *Total PRAQ-R score calculated with subscale ‘child-related anxiety’ (range 4–20)
Multiple regression model using ANCOVA test to identify variables associated with higher post-test-result STAI and PRAQ-R scores in women with a normal NIPT result
| Independent Variables | Post-test-result | Post-test-result | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Age | 2 | 57.229 | 1.029 | 0.358 | 2 | 3.636 | 0.539 | 0.584 |
| Level of education | 2 | 5.949 | 0.120 | 0.887 | 2 | 15.655 | 2.330 | 0.099 |
| A priori risk | 2 | 7.448 | 0.152 | 0.859 | 2 | 7.569 | 1.247 | 0.289 |
| Informed choice | 1 | 69.228 | 1.244 | 0.265 | 1 | 4.047 | 0.602 | 0.438 |
| Health literacy | 1 | 220.478 | 3.961 |
| 1 | 105.554 | 15.606 |
|
| Medical indication for NIPT | 1 | 359.781 | 6.463 |
| 1 | 47.570 | 7.033 |
|
|
| ||||||||
| Pre-test STAI score/Pre-test PRAQ-R score | 1 | 3242.935 | 58.257 |
| 1 | 625.675 | 92.508 |
|
STAI State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (Marteau & Bekker 1992; van der Bij et al. 2003), PRAQ-R Pregnancy-Related Anxiety Questionnaire-Revised (Huizink et al. 2004)
a N = 361 women were excluded from analyses (n = 263 to fit criteria of informed choice analysis (van Schendel et al. 2016) and n = 98 because of missing values on one of the variables)
bStatistical significance set at p < 0.05
Responses of women with a normal NIPT result (N = 656) to statements about reassurance after NIPT results
| Not at all applicable | Hardly applicable | Somewhat applicable | Very much applicable | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I was reassured by the test-result | 16 (2.4) | 6 (0.9) | 103 (15.7) | 530 (80.9) |
| I am confident that the test-result is correct | 1 (0.2) | 4 (0.6) | 120 (18.3) | 531 (80.9) |
| The test-result offers me sufficient certainty whether my child has a disorder | 2 (0.3) | 9 (1.4) | 223 (34.0) | 421 (64.3) |
Numbers may not add up to the total due to missing values