| Literature DB >> 30581191 |
Anitra Persaud1, Stacy Desine1, Katherine Blizinsky1,2,3, Vence L Bonham4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Genome editing holds both tremendous therapeutic promise and significant potential risk. Sickle cell disease (SCD), the most commonly inherited blood disorder, is a frontline candidate for the clinical applications of this tool. However, there is limited knowledge of patient community values and concerns regarding this new technology. This study aims to investigate the perspectives of three key decision-makers (patients, parents, and physicians) toward participation in future CRISPR-mediated somatic genome editing clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; ELSI; clinical trials; sickle cell disease; somatic genome editing
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30581191 PMCID: PMC6606394 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-018-0409-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Demographics of focus group participants
| Characteristic | Patients | Parents | Physicians |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Female | 34 (74) | 32 (78) | 14 (61) |
| Male | 12 (26) | 8 (20) | 9 (39) |
|
| |||
| 18–30 | 18 (39) | 1 (2) | 2 (9) |
| 31–40 | 9 (20) | 13 (32) | 4 (17) |
| 41–50 | 11 (24) | 14 (34) | 2 (9) |
| 51–65 | 4 (9) | 11 (27) | 10 (43) |
| >65 | 2 (4) | 1 (2) | 3 (13) |
|
| |||
| African American | 39 (85) | 35 (85) | 6 (26) |
| White | 0 | 0 | 7 (30) |
| Asian | 0 | 0 | 6 (26) |
| Hispanic/Latino | 1 (2) | 1 (2) | 0 (0) |
| Other | 4 (9) | 4 (10) | 1 (4) |
|
| |||
| High school or less | 3 (7) | 3 (7) | 0 |
| Some college | 17 (37) | 20 (49) | 0 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 9 (20) | 4 (10) | 0 |
| Master’s degree | 13 (28) | 9 (22) | 0 |
| Graduate school degree | 2 (4) | 4 (10) | n/a |
|
| |||
| Private | 15 (33) | 21 (51) | n/a |
| Medicare | 19 (41) | 5 (12) | n/a |
| Medicaid | 14 (30) | 14 (35) | n/a |
| Military health care | 0 | 1 (2) | n/a |
| No coverage of any type | 2 (4) | 4 (10) | n/a |
| Other | 3 (7) | 0 | n/a |
|
| |||
| Married | 11 (24) | 22 (54) | n/a |
| Widowed | 1 (2) | 2 (5) | n/a |
| Divorced or separated | 4 (9) | 7 (17) | n/a |
| Never married | 20 (43) | 7 (17) | n/a |
| Living with partner | 7 (15) | 1 (2) | n/a |
|
| |||
| A great deal | 20 (43) | 19 (48) | n/a |
| Quite a bit | 6 (13) | 12 (29) | n/a |
| Some | 4 (9) | 4 (9) | n/a |
| Not at all | 6 (13) | 0 (0) | n/a |
|
| |||
| Very spiritual | 22 (48) | 22 (54) | n/a |
| Moderately spiritual | 12 (26) | 14 (34) | n/a |
| Not spiritual at all | 2 (4) | 1 (2) | n/a |
|
| |||
| Yes | 34 (74) | 25 (61) | n/a |
| No | 9 (20) | 14 (34) | n/a |
|
| |||
| Yes | n/a | n/a | 11 (48) |
| No | n/a | n/a | 11 (48) |
|
| |||
| Yes | n/a | n/a | 16 (70) |
| No | n/a | n/a | 7 (30) |
PI principal investigator, SCD sickle cell disease.
aMissing demographic data for one parent.
bRepresents physician participants who report previously having been, or currently being, the principal investigator (PI) or investigator of a clinical trial.
Decision-making factors related to future somatic gene editing clinical trial participation
| Theme | Subtheme | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
|
| Reduce Suffering, Prevent Disease Progression, and Promote Quality of Life | “I think if more research was done, I would consider it. I have suffered a lot from sickle cell, and at this point, I deal with chronic pain. I would do it in the hopes that this illness doesn’t continue to destroy my body.” “With sickle cell, I can’t just hop up and run and go do something. I have to think about it, weigh it out. Is it worth my time? Do I really want to do it? Like yesterday, we wanted to go to the pool…Because the sun was starting to go down and the temperature was dropping, I couldn’t just go and jump in the pool because I could go into crisis…sometimes it is hard for me to pick my daughter up when she wants me to.” “How would it improve or affect their level of function? Like on a daily basis. Like patients with sickle cell disease want to know if they will have less painful crises. That they are able to get to work more. Not miss as many school days.” |
| Altruism | “My participation would only be to benefit my 13-year-old niece. Anything that would make her life different and better than mine was at her age, that would be my only reason to participate.” “I think about how can this help all of our children. And so, I would probably be the flip parent and say where do I sign up because I’ve been down this road. I’ve seen what some of my friends have gone through. It can be very dark. It can be very lonely.” | |
| Shortcomings of Current Treatment Options | “I’m not going to lie. If I knew that I could change something in my bone marrow with DNA and not feel pain anymore, I would do it. I don’t want to get chemotherapy, though.” “I don’t think we always think about the social implications that it has, you know, like bone marrow transplant sounds wonderful if it cures your sickle cell disease but nobody talks about the fact that nobody is going to be able to come see you for six months and what that does to a child, you know.” “I think of it this way: That my patients have been waiting so long for this. Because there’s such limitations to transplantation.” | |
|
| Permanency of Changing DNA, Uncertainty of Risks, and Long-Term Impact | “I’m really talking about changing someone’s DNA. There is always that unintended consequence. You do A, but with the unknown potential?” “I think that you have to talk about the fact that a lot of the risks are unknown. We don’t know what is going to happen 20 years from now if we edit your genes when you are a little baby.” |
| Trial Involvement Burden | “Getting to and from, yeah. How much time is it going to take, even though right now she’s not working, I am. I’m the only person working in our household.” “If the schedule is intense then that may not work with my lifestyle because I wouldn’t want to have to miss days of work and things like that…because I feel like with trials you can’t like miss things.” “Some more details about, you know, what would it look like? How many days would they be in the hospital? How sick would they be? How long after would they feel normal again?” | |
| Mistrust of Intent Due to Historical Marginalization | “What is your real reason of researching it?” “‘Oh, look, this person got cured’ But they never tell you about all the people that are still living with just horrible side effects.” “You have to think about intent. We have also seen how malicious intent has made advancements go very wrong in our society. There was a question about do you trust your government to do the right thing. Well, I used to.” | |
| Reproduction and Genetic Inheritance | “Families are going to ask…I know many of us have been in the situation where we are talking about transplant and cure, one of the things that you have to discuss, because I don’t think it is intuitive, is that you will still have the ability to pass on the sickle gene.” “The other thing that concerns me is that this just fixes the problem for the patient now. What happens when my son has a son, the future generations… I would like to see something that maybe is permanent…” | |
| Concerns over Cost and Access | “If this treatment becomes available to the public, will it be available to everyone equally? I am not rich, but I qualify. I have sickle cell. I struggle with it daily… I don’t want the reason why I can’t get it done is because, oh, your insurance or you don’t have the money.” “The companies are all thinking they will make …about a million to a million and a half dollars … for each procedure… I think that the money might be a problem.” | |
|
| Religiosity and Spirituality | “If they can go in and snip out this illness and give you a better quality of life, I think God would appreciate that doctor doing that for his child.” “I have a child with sickle cell. I have other family members with sickle cell and I still would be on the fence. Because I feel like we’re kind of—we’re playing with God so-to-speak.” |
| Capacity to Manage Disease and Stage of Life | “Well, being 47, I would want to know what benefit—like, is this going to extend my life? How? Because I’ve managed now, and I’m comfortable with it for the most part.” “I’m sort of at a crossroads. For me to do it...because I’m so used to the pain now and knowing how to control and how to get ahead of it, it would have to be a life or death decision.” | |
|
| Specific Details on Procedure and Clinical Expectations | “I’d also like to know if some things could possibly be reversed…will it correct my vision problems?” “How long is the gene is going to hold up for? Do you have to keep going back for some new genes, like, how are they putting it into my body?” “A patient needs to know that gene therapy may cure you only if you do it at birth. If you wait until you have already suffered a stroke, renal disease, whatever… even if you have gene therapy, this is not going to reverse the damage that has already occurred.” ( |
| Inter-Patient Variability and Rationale Behind Eligibility Criteria | “What are the different results or side effects for the different traits and the different types of sickle cell that you have? | |
| Track Record of Research | “What made it effective? How many rats did they use based on this type? How many humans did they use on this type?” “Chances of success, chances of failure, chance of death, chance of irreversible complications, known possible things that could go wrong. How many people have been through this already?” “There’s a saying, there’s proof in the pudding. I want you to show me evidence and your findings and your result, whether it’s 25 percent, 50 percent.” |
Facilitators and barriers to participation in future somatic gene editing clinical trials
| Facilitators | Patients | Parents | Physicians |
|---|---|---|---|
| I want to help other patients with SCD | 31 (97) | 27 (87) | 13 (76) |
| I want to contribute to science | 15 (47) | 22 (71) | 11 (65) |
| It would be better to do something rather than just wait for [my/my child’s/my patient’s] SCD to get worse | 26 (81) | 24 (77) | 11 (65) |
| I hope it would help [my/my child’s/my patient’s] SCD | 27 (84) | 27 (87) | 15 (88) |
| I expect that it would help[my/my child’s/my patient’s] SCD | 22 (69) | 26 (84) | 15 (88) |
| Maybe it would help [my/my child’s/my patient’s] SCD in the long run, if the research succeeds | 21 (66) | 29 (94) | 14 (82) |
| For the sake of my loved ones | 24 (75) | 21 (68) | n/a |
|
| |||
| It seems too dangerous | 20 (63) | 18 (58) | 8 (47) |
| It seems like a lot of work for [me/my child/my patient] to be involved in the study | 12 (38) | 10 (32) | 6 (35) |
| I don’t want [me/my child/my patient] to be a guinea pig | 11 (34) | 17 (55) | 2 (12) |
| I don’t like the idea of messing with [my/my child’s/my patient’s] genes | 18 (56) | 21 (68) | 4 (24) |
| The purpose of the study would not solely benefit [me/my child/my patient] directly | 2 (6) | 9 (29) | 5 (29) |
aResponses included 0 = Not a Reason, 1 = Minor Reason, 2 = Moderate Reason, 3 = Strong Reason. Scores of 2 and 3 were used to calculate the numbers/percentages above.
Recommendations for the research community on meaningful engagement
| Theme | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Keep all aspects of the approach patient- and community-centric | “We need a seat at the table. When this clinical trial is going on and you’ve got the researchers setting up protocols, setting up how it is going to work—advocacy, CBO…people that have sickle cell, need to be involved in every aspect of the trial.” “I think for me the education component of it is really big. Everybody who has sickle cell knows somebody with sickle cell…. The more educated we are, the more powerful we become. And then we don’t have to worry about our community being underserved because they’ll be able to advocate for themselves….” “One of the things I am working with in utero stem cell transplantation for SCD is going back to that community and saying, what is your understanding of IVF, PGD? Of stem cell transplants? And really trying to address, not just the barriers, but the opportunity—let’s do it the right way. Let us understand the population that we are trying to help a little bit better by figuring out how we can best prepare them.” |
| Dedicate resources to SCD because this disease has not received the attention it deserves | “I would say don’t mess it up…if you are really talking about it impacting the sickle cell population, you have to be very careful that the other rare diseases that have more resources don’t take it over and the sickle cell population gets left in the dust. Because they have been left in the dust with so many other things that they already are skeptics.” ( “Dedicate the resources because we as a community deserve it. Sickle cell should be the first…. No excuses. We don’t have treatments.” |
| Be trustworthy, transparent, and provide easy access to clear information | “Make it accessible. Not so hidden that you have to go through hoops and back doors to find it because oftentimes that is a problem. We know the research is out there. We know the information is out there. But accessing that information is sometimes very, very difficult.” “I would just want them to keep us in the loop, like, really. With the good and the bad.” |
CBO Community Based Organzation, IVF in vitro fertilization, PGD preimplantation genetic diagnosis, SCD sickle cell disease.