| Literature DB >> 30270361 |
Saskia C Sanderson1,2, Celine Lewis3,4, Christine Patch5,6, Melissa Hill3,4, Maria Bitner-Glindzicz3,4, Lyn S Chitty3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Little is known about how health-care professionals communicate with patients about consenting to genome sequencing. We therefore examined what topics health-care professionals covered and what questions patients asked during consent conversations.Entities:
Keywords: communication skills; education; genome sequencing; informed consent; next-generation sequencing
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30270361 PMCID: PMC6752270 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-018-0310-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Consenter and participant characteristics
| Characteristics | Number ( |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Gender | |
| Female | 10 |
| Male | 0 |
| Highest level of education/training | |
| No degree: A-levels | 1 |
| Undergraduate degree: BA | 1 |
| Postgraduate degree: MSc | 5 |
| Doctorate degree: PhD | 1 |
| Doctorate degree: MD & PhD | 1 |
| Job/role | |
| Research assistant or coordinator | 7 |
| Research nurse | 1 |
| Genetic counselor | 1 |
| Geneticist | 1 |
| Trained genetic counselor | |
| Yes | 1 |
| No | 9 |
| Number of consenters at each site | |
| Site 1 | 2 |
| Site 2 | 2 |
| Site 3 | 2 |
| Site 4 | 4 |
|
| |
| Participant type | |
| Adult with a rare disease | 14 |
| Parent of a child with a rare disease | 12 |
| Parent of an adult with a rare disease | 5 |
| Other relativea of an adult with a rare disease | 4 |
| Gender | |
| Female | 16 |
| Male | 19 |
| Ethnicity | |
| White British/white European | 29 |
| Asian | 2 |
| Algerian | 1 |
| Afghan | 1 |
| Black African | 1 |
| White British & Asian | 1 |
| Age | |
| Range 24 to 70 years, median 46 years | |
|
| |
| Number of participants present | |
| One adult patient | 10 |
| Two parents of a child patient | 6 |
| One adult patient and one or more parents/relatives | 5 |
aFor example, a sibling
Fig. 1Fragment illustrating a consenter-led conversation where the participant was not actively involved in the conversation.
Frequency with which 100,000 Genomes Project consent form topics were included in the discussion
| Topic | Frequency topic included in discussion |
|---|---|
| What personal health data will be accessed and how it will be used | 20 |
| All information will be confidential | 20 |
| Information about main findings (including potential benefit to patient) | 20 |
| Participant can withdraw any time | 20 |
| Participant can choose whether they want to receive secondary findings | 19 |
| Information generated may have implications for participant's family members | 19 |
| Checking the participant has read the PIS and/or had opportunity to ask questions about PIS content | 17 |
| Information about giving blood and future samples | 17 |
| Commercial companies can access the participant’s data | 17 |
| The participant may be contacted by the clinical or project team in the future | 17 |
| Results may not be able to provide a diagnosis or change the participant’s care | 17 |
| Results may not be returned in a time frame that is clinically useful | 17 |
| How the participant's samples will be used | 16 |
| The participant will not benefit financially | 16 |
| Other findings (outside of agreed secondary findings) will not be routinely returned | 16 |
| Participation in the 100,000 Genomes Project is voluntary | 15 |
| Declining to take part in the 100,000 Genomes Project won’t affect the care the participant receives | 13 |
| Uncertainty about disease risks associated with secondary findings | 13 |
| Participant can change mind about secondary findings (through opt-in and opt-out forms) | 8 |
Total n = 21. The consent form sections relating to “carrier status findings” are not reported here as these were only relevant to a subset of six appointments.
PIS patient information sheet
Fig. 2Fragment illustrating a consenter inviting participants’ questions specifically about secondary findings.