| Literature DB >> 30250657 |
Rachel M Wynn1, Katharine T Adams1, Rebecca L Kowalski1, Winnie G Shivega2, Raj M Ratwani1,2, Kristen E Miller1,2.
Abstract
Precision medicine (PM) has the potential to tailor healthcare to the individual patient by using their genetic information to guide treatment choices. However, this process is complex and difficult to understand for patients and providers alike. With a recent push in the healthcare community to understand the patient experience and engage patients in their care, it is important to give patients the opportunity to learn about PM. We performed a systematic review to identify previous work assessing the quality of patient-facing PM materials from 2008 to July 2018. Ten studies were identified, which used varying methods and measures. A qualitative assessment was conducted to compare key elements of the studies, including study design, characteristics of the participant population, what measurements were used to assess the PM materials, understandability, preference, psychological reactions, and the type of PM materials being assessed. The studies identified provide important groundwork by highlighting consistent aspects of design that aid in comprehension. Eight of the ten studies focused on the content and organization of genomic test results, while the remaining two assessed educational tools. Two main design elements that appeared across the studies were appropriately designed visual aids and simplified language. The studies identified were limited by the participant populations that were used, which were primarily white and well educated. Only one study attempted to oversample patient populations typically underrepresented in this type of research. Through our systematic review, it is evident that the breadth of knowledge in this field is limited in scope and that more work must be done to ensure that patients can engage in their care when faced with PM.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30250657 PMCID: PMC6140003 DOI: 10.1155/2018/9541621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Eng ISSN: 2040-2295 Impact factor: 2.682
Figure 1Search terms used in PubMed, Web of Science, and ScienceDirect.
Figure 2PRISMA 2009 flow diagram illustrating the number of articles included and excluded at each step.
Brief summary of the methodology, sample size (N), and characteristics of participant population, PM materials, and PM results type used in the included articles.
| Citation | Methodology |
| Participant population characteristics | PM materials assessed | PM results type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barajas et al. [ | Focus groups | 17 | Patients currently taking warfarin | Educational tool developed as part of the study design | Hypothetical scenarios |
| Brewer et al. [ | Randomized trial | 133 | Patients with positive early stage breast cancer diagnosis | Results developed as part of the study design | Hypothetical results |
| Giuse et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | 88 | Patients with positive melanoma diagnosis or their caregivers | Educational tools developed as part of the study design | Hypothetical results |
| Kaphingst et al. [ | Observational | 199 | Patients enrolled in health maintenance organization | Results developed from best practices in health literacy | Actual patient results |
| Leighton et al. [ | Observational | 145 | General public | Commercially available DTC report | Hypothetical results |
| 171 | Genetic counselors | ||||
| Liang et al. [ | Interview | 16 | Patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer | Results previously provided from molecular testing | Actual patient results |
| 8 | Patients with melanoma | ||||
| Olson et al. [ | Observational | 869 | Patients in the Mayo Clinic Biobank | A summary and full report of pharmacogenomic test results | Actual patient results |
| Ostergen et al. [ | Observational | 1030 | Current consumers of personal genomic testing | Commercially available DTC report | Hypothetical results |
| Shaer et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | 730 | General public | Results developed as part of the study design | Hypothetical results |
| Stuckey et al. [ | Semistructured interviews; focus groups | 9 | Parents of children enrolled in genome sequencing clinical research study | Results developed as part of the study design | Hypothetical results |
Measurement definitions.
| Knowledge metrics | Understandability | Trust | Preference | Psychological reactions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barajas et al. [ | — | Discussion about the content of the tool | — | Discussion about the content of the tool | Discussion about openness to testing |
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| Brewer et al. [ | 1. Gist recall: low/med/high risk | 1. “How confident are you that you understand this test result?” | “How much do you trust that this test result is accurate?” | Rank 6 formats from liked most to liked least | — |
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| Giuse et al. [ | Before and after 10-question knowledge quiz about genetics, the disease, and the mutation | — | — | — | |
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| Kaphingst et al. [ | 1. Free recall | Likert-scale ratings of the deterministic nature of results | Likert-scale ratings of the believability, reliability, completeness, helpfulness, difficulty, and accuracy of the information | — | Adapted Positive and Negative Affect Scale [ |
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| Leighton et al. [ | Specifics unavailable, compared perceived risk between general public and genetic counselors | Specifics unavailable | Belief that results would be helpful in deciding future medical management | — | Level of concern |
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| Liang et al. [ | Free recall | Discussion about understanding of somatic tumor screening | Discussion about views, perceived advantages and disadvantages of somatic tumor screening | Discussion about information and communication preferences | Discussion about psychological support needs |
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| Olson et al. [ | Questionnaire | Questionnaire | Likert-scale ratings of participant attitudes and usefulness of pharmacogenomics testing | Open-end questions about improvement of results letter | Question about opening to encourage others to get pharmacogenomic testing |
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| Ostergen et al. [ | Accuracy scores | Likert-scale ratings of the deterministic nature of results | Likert-scale ratings of the believability, reliability, completeness, helpfulness, difficulty, and accuracy of the information | — | — |
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| Shaer et al. [ | Questionnaire | Questionnaire | — | Questionnaire | |
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| Stuckey et al. [ | — | Discussion and interview questions about the content | — | Discussion about content | Discussion about desire for Next Steps |