| Literature DB >> 29950170 |
Laura V Milko1, Christine Rini2, Megan A Lewis3, Rita M Butterfield4, Feng-Chang Lin5, Ryan S Paquin3, Bradford C Powell1, Myra I Roche4, Katherine J Souris6, Donald B Bailey7, Jonathan S Berg1, Cynthia M Powell8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Using next-generation sequencing (NGS) in newborn screening (NBS) could expand the number of genetic conditions detected pre-symptomatically, simultaneously challenging current precedents, raising ethical concerns, and extending the role of parental decision-making in NBS. The NC NEXUS (Newborn Exome Sequencing for Universal Screening) study seeks to assess the technical possibilities and limitations of NGS-NBS, devise and evaluate a framework to convey various types of genetic information, and develop best practices for incorporating NGS-NBS into clinical care. The study is enrolling both a healthy cohort and a cohort diagnosed with known disorders identified through recent routine NBS. It uses a novel age-based metric to categorize a priori the large amount of data generated by NGS-NBS and interactive online decision aids to guide parental decision-making. Primary outcomes include: (1) assessment of NGS-NBS sensitivity, (2) decision regret, and (3) parental decision-making about NGS-NBS, and, for parents randomized to have the option of requesting them, additional findings (diagnosed and healthy cohorts). Secondary outcomes assess parents' reactions to the study and to decision-making. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Newborn screening; Parental decision aid; Randomized trial; Sequencing; Translational genomics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29950170 PMCID: PMC6022715 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2686-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Study design workflow. Three phases of the NC NEXUS study workflow. During phase 1, interested parents agree to learn more about the study and are asked to complete the time 1 pre-decision questionnaire and the time 2 post-decision assessment. Parents use the decision aid to learn about the study and NGS-NBS for their child and complete informed consent procedures at a clinic study visit if they decide to participate. During phase 2, samples are obtained after consent is given at study visit 1. Randomization status and NGS-NBS results are returned to parents at their second study visit. During phase 3, parents in the decision arm decide via a second part of the decision aid whether to consent to and receive any additional information by phone (for carrier status results) or at a third study visit. Parents randomized to the decision arm also complete a time 2A post-additional information decision assessment. Both the decision arm and the control arm complete a short-term follow-up assessment and a long-term follow-up assessment. NBS newborn screening, NGS next-generation sequencing
Fig. 2SPIRIT figure. Schedule of enrolment, interventions, and assessments. AI additional information, NBS newborn screening, NGS next-generation sequencing
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Both cohorts | Well-child cohort | Diagnosed cohort | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inclusion criteria | Parents (couple) or mothers: | Parents (couple) or mothers: | Infants and children from 0 to 5 years who are medically stable and |
| Exclusion criteria | Parents (couple) and mothers: | ||
Categories of results that are returned to the two cohorts of the NC NEXUS study
| Categories of results | Well-child cohort | Diagnosed cohort |
|---|---|---|
| NGS-NBS results | Only pathogenic variants | Only pathogenic variants |
| Diagnostic results | Not applicable | Results of indication-based analysis for diagnosed conditions: |
| Categories of information that parents randomized to the decision arm are eligible to request: | ||
| Childhood-onset non-medically actionable results | Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants reported | Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants reported |
| Adult-onset medically actionable results | Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants reported | Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants reported |
| Carrier results | Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants reported | Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants reported |
Timing and measures
| Measure | Citation | Scale information | Time 1 (pre-decision baseline, phase 1) | Time 2 (post-decision, phase 1 or 2a) | Time 2A (post-additional information decision,bphase 2) | Time 3 (short-term follow-up) | Time 4 (long-term follow-up) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographic variables | X | ||||||
| Health literacy | [ | 1 item | X | ||||
| Personal and family history of genetic testing | 5 items | X | |||||
| Knowledge of genomic sequencing | [ | 19 items | X | X | X | ||
| Understanding NC NEXUS | 5 items | X | |||||
| General depression and anxiety | [ | 14 items | X | X | X | ||
| Decisional conflict | [ | 16 items | X | X | |||
| Decision regret | [ | 5 items | X | X | |||
| Decision regret for additional informationc | Adapted from [ | 6 items | X | X | |||
| Dyadic decision-making conflict | 9 items | X | X | ||||
| Test-related distress | [ | 17 items | X | X |
aThe time 2 questionnaire is administered in phase 1 for participants who decline NGS-NBS in the decision aid and in phase 2 for those who indicate interest in NGS-NBS in the decision aid by selecting accept or undecided
bThis questionnaire is completed by decision arm participants after they decide to learn all, some, or none of the three categories of additional information
c Relevant to decision arm participants only