| Literature DB >> 30055660 |
Arno de Wilde1, Marieke M van Buchem2, René H J Otten3, Femke Bouwman2, Andrew Stephens4, Frederik Barkhof5,6, Philip Scheltens2, Wiesje M van der Flier2,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Disclosure of amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) results to individuals without dementia has become standard practice in secondary prevention trials and also increasingly occurs in clinical practice. However, this is controversial given the current lack of understanding of the predictive value of a PET result at the individual level and absence of disease-modifying treatments. In this study, we systematically reviewed the literature on the disclosure of amyloid PET in cognitively normal (CN) individuals and patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in both research and clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloid PET; Disclosure; Non-demented; Psychological impact
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30055660 PMCID: PMC6064628 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-018-0398-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram illustrating the process of study selection. AD Alzheimer’s disease
Overview of studies presenting empirical evidence
| Author (year) | Objective | Setting | Design | Population ( | Determinant | Assessment time points | Outcome measures | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Research context | |||||||||
| Researchers attitudes towards disclosure | |||||||||
| Shulman et al. (2013) [ | To evaluate nondisclosure policy | Research | Survey | 159 ADNI investigators and research staff | n.a. | n.a. | Practices and attitudes about returning amyloid imaging results | Small minority of CN (45%) and MCI (40%) participants do not request PET results. Most ADNI investigators did not return amyloid results to CN (94%) and MCI (90%). Majority would support disclosure to CN (58%) and MCI (73%) if FDA approval. Emphasized need for guidance on disclosure strategy | In view of FDA approval of amyloid imaging, disclosure to both CN and MCI is supported, and there is a need for 1) disclosure protocols and 2) knowledge on effect on participants |
| Cognitively normal study participants attitudes towards disclosure | |||||||||
| Ott et al. (2016) [ | To assess the interest in knowledge of amyloid PET status | Research | Survey | 164 CN | n.a. | n.a. | Wishes to learn amyloid PET status and, if so, reasons for wanting to know | 81% desired to know amyloid status, motivated by desire to participate in AD research (73%), and to prepare family for illness (60%). Main reason for not desiring amyloid status was due to depressed feelings (40%). 12% indicated to use information for making plans on ending their life when memory loss becomes imminent | Stakeholders in AD prevention research generally wish to know information about their risk for developing AD to assist future planning. |
| Gooblar et al. (2015) [ | To assess effect of education on disclosure attitude | Research | RCT | 219 CN | Education intervention (education: | Pre- and postintervention | Interest in disclosurea | High preintervention interest (mean: 4.0 ± 1.1) in receiving amyloid imaging results, which significantly decreased after education versus placebo (OR 2.8, 95% CI 1.6–5.1) when controlled for preintervention level of interest | Learning about limitations of disclosure somewhat tempers interest |
| Grill et al. (2016) [ | To assess the impact of amyloid disclosure on trial participation willingness | Research | RCT | 132 self-reported CN older adults | Hypothetical ICF (transparent: | Postintervention | Likelihood of enrollmentb | No significant difference in willingness to participate between transparent (70%) and blinded (61%) group. | Requirement of amyloid disclosure may not slow recruitment to preclinical AD trials |
| Impact of disclosure | |||||||||
| Burns et al. (2017) [ | To assess effect of amyloid disclosure | Research | Prospective cohort study | 97 CN older adults | Amyloid status (amyloid positive: | Before and at disclosure, and 6 weeks and 6 months post-disclosure | Depression (CES-D), anxiety (BAI), and test-related distress (IGT-AD) | No difference in depressive symptoms, slight increase in test-related distress, and group by time interaction in anxiety, without significant group differences | Disclosure has low risk of psychological harm |
| Lim et al. (2016) [ | To assess impact of amyloid disclosure | Research | Prospective cohort study | 11 CN older adults | Psychoeducational program (amyloid positive: | Baseline, 9 and 18 months follow-up | Subjective complaints (MAC-Q), depression (DASS-D), anxiety (DASS-A), stress symptoms (DASS-S), and impact of events scale (IES-R) | Insufficient numbers for formal comparisons. Little change in psychological factors. Psychoeducational brochure rated as very useful. Disclosure of amyloid positivity motivated lifestyle changes | Disclosing amyloid status to CN older adults, who requested the information, seems safe |
| Vanderschaeghe et al. (2017) [ | To assess how patients perceive and experience disclosure | Research | Semi-structured interviews | 38 amnestic MCI patients | n.a. | 2 weeks and 6 months post-disclosure | Fixed set of interview elements | 2/8 PET-positive patients experienced emotional difficulties. 3/30 PET-negative patients doubted whether they received the correct result | Experienced advantages and disadvantages depended on outcome of PET result |
| Grill et al. (2017) [ | To assess how patients perceive and experience disclosure | Clinic | Semi-structured telephone interview | 26 patient-caregiver dyads, mostly with dementia, some MCI | n.a. | Post-disclosure (unspecified) | Fixed set of interview elements | Most patients would undergo amyloid PET again. Regardless of outcome, patients and caregivers commonly expressed relief on learning their results | Amyloid PET may provide information that patients and families find useful |
| Development of approach for amyloid disclosure | |||||||||
| Lingler et al. (2016) [ | Development of amyloid disclosure protocol | Research | RCT and focus group | 10 MCI care dyads | Mock disclosure (amyloid positive: | Postintervention | Satisfaction surveys, comprehension assessments, and focus groups | Recommendations included pretest counseling, screening for anxiety and depression, separate days for consent procedure, imaging, and disclosure, and follow-up to monitor the impact of disclosure, anxiety, and depression | MCI care dyads comprehended the information and were highly satisfied |
| Harkins et al. (2015) [ | Development of amyloid disclosure protocol | Research | Modified Delphi method | Experts | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Recommendations included pretest counseling, the use of participants’ own brain images during disclosure, take-home materials, and follow-up to address emerging questions | Documents and process will be used in the A4 study |
| Clinical context | |||||||||
| Dementia specialists attitudes towards disclosure | |||||||||
| Klein and Kaye (2013) [ | To assess attitudes of neurologists specializing in dementia towards the use of amyloid imaging | Clinic | Survey | 135 neurologists specializing in dementia | n.a. | n.a. | Intention to use amyloid imaging in diagnosing AD and, if so, how they plan to use it | 84% affirmed intention to use amyloid PET in practice. 24% intended to use PET for screening asymptomatic individuals. Patients should be counseled (92%) | Specialists generally support disclosure, but recognize complexity of scan interpretation, and need for patient counseling |
A4 Anti-Amyloid Treatment in Asymptomatic Alzheimer’s Disease, AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADNI Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, CES-D Center for Epidemiological Studies of Depression Scale, CI confidence interval, CN cognitively normal, DASS-A depression, anxiety, and stress scale, anxiety subscale, DASS-D depression, anxiety, and stress scale, depression subscale, DASS-S depression, anxiety, and stress scale, stress subscale, FDA Food and Drug Administration, ICF informed consent form, IES-R impact of events scale, revised edition, IGT-AD Impact of Genetic Testing for Alzheimer’s Disease, MAC-Q Memory Complaints Questionnaire, MCI mild cognitive impairment, n.a. non-applicable, OR odds ratio, PET positron emission tomography, RCT randomized controlled trial
aFive-point Likert scale
bSix-point Likert scale
Overview of theoretical arguments in favor or against amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) result disclosure
| Cognitively normal | Mild cognitive impairment | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Arguments | Research | Clinic | Research | Clinic |
| Pro | |||||
| Ethical | Patient autonomy | X10,41 | X10,41 | X39 | X5 |
| Evidence of non-maleficence | X10,40,41 | X10,40,41 | |||
| Social and legal | Cost and suffering reduction | X38 | X38 | ||
| Favors Alzheimer’s disease prevention | X10 | X10 | |||
| Psychological and behavioral | Enables early decision making | X10,38,41 | X10,38,41 | X39 | X5 |
| Clarifying effect of correct diagnosis | X38 | X38 | X39 | X5 | |
| Relief related to negative amyloid PET | X38,41 | X38,41 | |||
| Satisfies need for risk information | X41 | X41 | |||
| PET imaging characteristics | Amyloid PET imaging is validated | X39 | |||
| Clinical significance of amyloid PET | X5 | ||||
| Contra | |||||
| Ethical | Non-maleficence | X10,38,41 | X10,38,41 | X39 | X5 |
| Lack of effective intervention | X10,38 | X10,38 | X39 | ||
| Therapeutic misconception | X2 | X2 | |||
| Social and legal | Unwanted personal implications | X38,41 | X10,38,41 | X5 | |
| Social stigmatization | X38,41 | X38,41 | |||
| Psychological and behavioral | Risk of psychological distress | X10,38,41 | X10,38,41 | X5 | |
| Risk of false reassurance after negative PET | X10,41 | X10,41 | X39 | ||
| Misinterpretation of positive amyloid PET | X41 | X41 | |||
| PET imaging characteristics | Challenges related to inconclusive scans | X10,38 | X10,38 | X5 | |
| Limited predictive value at level of individual | X10,41 | X10,41 | |||
| Variation on interpretation of PET results | X10 | X10 | |||