| Literature DB >> 28856579 |
Emilia Niemiec1,2,3, Danya F Vears4,5, Pascal Borry4,5, Heidi Carmen Howard6.
Abstract
Whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing (WES, WGS) can generate an unprecedented amount of complex information, making the informed consent (IC) process challenging. The aim of our study was to assess the readability of English IC forms for clinical whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing using the SMOG and Flesch-Kincaid formulas. We analysed 36 forms, most of which were from US providers. The median readability grade levels were 14.75 (the SMOG formula) and 12.2 (the Flesch-Kincaid formula); these values indicate the years of education after which a person would be able to understand a text studied. All forms studied seem to fail to meet the average recommended readability grade level of 8 (e.g. by Institutional Review Boards of US medical schools) for IC forms, indicating that the content of the forms may not be comprehensible to many patients. The sections aimed at health care professionals (HCPs) in the forms indicate that HCPs should be responsible for explaining IC information to the patients. However, WES and WGS may be increasingly offered by primary care professionals who may not (yet) have sufficient training to be able to communicate effectively with patients about genomics. Therefore, to secure an adequate, truly informed consent process, the task of developing good, legible examples of IC forms along with educating HCPs in genomics should be taken seriously, and adequate resources should be allocated to enable these tasks.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic counselling; Informed consent; Readability; Whole exome sequencing; Whole genome sequencing
Year: 2017 PMID: 28856579 PMCID: PMC5849699 DOI: 10.1007/s12687-017-0324-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Genet ISSN: 1868-310X
Information regarding the readability formulas used to analyse consent forms
| Flesch-Kincaid formula | SMOGa formula | |
|---|---|---|
| Original development and reference | The formula has been designed for evaluating readability of technical texts for US military by Kincaid (Kincaid et al. | McLaughlin (McLaughlin |
| Analysis based on | Sentence length and syllable count | Number of complex words (3 and more syllables) |
| Easier formula for manual calculation (not used in this study) | G = (12*(B/W)) + (0 .4*(W/S)) – 16 | G = FLOOR(√C) + 3 |
| Higher precision formula used by the software in this study | G = (11.8*(B/W)) + (0.39*(W/S)) − 15.59 | G = 1.0430*√C + 3.1291 |
aOriginally, McLaughlin recommended using 10 consecutive sentences from the beginning of the text, 10 sentences from the middle and 10 from the end; the formula was meant to facilitate manual calculations. In our study, the calculations were based on the whole text (and not subsamples of the text) and standardized
Grade levels obtained for two categories of IC forms. The Maan-Whitney test was used for comparison of results between these two groups of test providers
| Type 1: universities/hospitals/medical centres and their “in-house” and/or owned laboratories | Type 2: laboratories/companies not associated with a university/hospital/medical centre |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grade level SMOG | Range 12.9–17; median 14.5 | Range 12.7–18.4 | Z = 1.61 |
| Word count | Range 204–3017; median 1405 | Range 544–2785; median 1541 | Z = 0.17 |
Information about IC forms: the country of origin, provider, type of test, groups to which it is offered
| Characteristics | Number of forms |
|---|---|
| Total number of forms | 36 |
| Country of origin | |
| USA | 29 |
| Germany | 2 |
| The Netherlands | 2 |
| Australia | 1 |
| Canada and Germany | 1 |
| Finland | 1 |
| Provider | |
| Type 1: university/hospital/medical centre and their “in-house” and/or owned laboratories | 18 |
| Type 2: company/laboratory not related to a university/hospital/medical centre | 18 |
| Type of test | |
| WGS | 5 |
| WES | 24 |
| WGS and WES | 4 |
| WGS, WES and another genetic test | 3 |
| Target group | |
| Only adults | 3 |
| Only children | 1 |
| Adults and children | 30 |
| Not specified | 2 |
Fig. 1Results of the SMOG calculation for all the forms studied. The indicated ranges include the scores that are equal to or greater than the lowest bound and less than the largest bound for the range
Fig. 2Results of the Flesch-Kincaid calculation for all the forms studied. The indicated ranges include the scores that are equal or greater than the lowest bound and less than the largest bound for the range
Fig. 3Comparison of readability between groups of IC forms using the SMOG formula. Type 1: universities/hospitals/medical centres and their “in-house” and/or owned laboratories; type 2: laboratories/companies not associated with a university/hospital/medical centre. The indicated ranges include the scores that are equal or greater than the lowest bound and less than the largest bound for the range