| Literature DB >> 30843145 |
Nora B Henrikson1, Paula R Blasi2, Stephanie M Fullerton3, Jane Grafton2, Kathleen A Leppig4, Gail P Jarvik5, Eric B Larson2.
Abstract
Assess the feasibility and acceptability of health system-led genetic risk notification in a US integrated health system. We conducted semi-structured phone interviews with individuals age 40-64 years who had undergone genetic sequencing, but had not yet received their results, assessing attitudes to direct outreach to relatives. During each interview, we collected contact information for adult relatives identified as members of the same system and attempted to identify each relative in administrative data. We conducted 20 interviews. Most participants expressed support for Kaiser Permanente Washington involvement in familial risk notification. Direct outreach to relatives received the most unqualified support; outreach to the relatives' physician or interaction with the relatives' electronic medical record received more tempered support. Support was motivated by the desire to have risk communicated accurately and quickly. The most common caveat was a desire to alert relatives before the health system contacted them. Of 57 named relatives who were members of the same health system, we retrieved a single match for 40 (70.2%) based on name or birthdate. Health system involvement in familial risk notification received support in a sample of patients in a US integrated health system, and identification of relatives is feasible.Entities:
Keywords: Bioethics; Cascade testing; Communication; Genetic testing; Risk notification
Year: 2019 PMID: 30843145 PMCID: PMC6754469 DOI: 10.1007/s12687-019-00412-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Genet ISSN: 1868-310X
Clinical vignettes
| Vignette 1: Marfan syndrome ( | |
Imagine that an eMERGE study doctor meets with you and explains that you have a variant in the The study doctor explains that there is a lot we can do to help. With appropriate care and surveillance, people with Marfan syndrome can expect to live long productive lives. We would look at your heart regularly using an echocardiogram (ultrasound for the heart). We may suggest medications to keep the aorta from widening. If the aorta becomes too wide, it may require surgery. We may recommend avoiding activities such as contact sports or weight lifting. Children who have Marfan syndrome can start seeing a specialist for monitoring of their heart. Most people with Marfan syndrome inherit the genetic change from a parent. Other close relatives may have this same genetic change. The doctor explains that your family members may wish to be tested to discover if they too have inherited the same risk factor. | |
| Vignette 2: malignant hyperthermia ( | |
Imagine that the eMERGE study doctor meets with you and explains instead that you have a variant in the If you have this variant, Kaiser Permanente would put an alert in your medical record so that if you ever needed surgery the team would know right away to avoid certain medications. The study doctor explains that it is likely that you inherited this variant from one of your parents. If you have brothers, sisters, or children, they might also wish to be tested to see if they have inherited the same risk factor. |
Participant demographics
| Interview participants | Overall sample | |
|---|---|---|
| Femalea | 16 (80%) | 58 (58%) |
| Age, mean (min, max)a | 58.7 (41, 64) | 61.6 (40, 64) |
| Race/ethnicitya | ||
| White non-Hispanic | 13 (65%) | 72 (72%) |
| White Hispanic | 2 (10%) | 4 (4%) |
| Asian | 5 (25%) | 20 (20%) |
| Black/African American | 0 (0%) | 2 (2%) |
| Native American/Alaskan | 0 (0%) | 2 (2%) |
| Educationb | ||
| High school | 2 (10%) | – |
| Some college | 4 (20%) | – |
| Bachelor’s degree | 9 (45%) | – |
| Post-graduate | 5 (25%) | – |
| Employmentb | ||
| Employed full time | 7 (35%) | – |
| Employed part time | 5 (25%) | – |
| Self-employed | 1 (5%) | – |
| Retired | 7 (35%) | – |
| Marital statusa | ||
| Now married/living as married | 15 (75%) | 79 (79%) |
| Never married | 3 (15%) | 12 (12%) |
| Divorced | 2 (10%) | 9 (9%) |
| Incomea | ||
| $25,001–$50,000 | 7 (35%) | 32 (32%) |
| $50,001–$75,000 | 6 (30%) | 39 (39%) |
| $75,001–$100,000 | 1 (5%) | 11 (11%) |
| more than $100,000 | 6 (30%) | 18 (18%) |
| CRC statusa | ||
| None | 10 (50%) | 48 (48%) |
| Polyp | 6 (30%) | 25 (25%) |
| CRC dx | 4 (20%) | 27 (27%) |
aFrom parent study data
bAssessed during semi-structured interview
Fig. 1Study design flowchart
Attitudes about KPWA involvement in risk notification
| Outreach type | Quotes |
|---|---|
| KPWA contacts family members directly | |
| Open FBN1: 7 (40%) RYR1: 11 (55%) | “Oh, yeah. I think that would be wonderful ... it would be so much easier instead of me trying to spit out what I think they need to have done or whatever. You folks could do it in a more—they know what they are talking about and in a more business-like, you know, informational way than I could.” (FBN1) |
| “You know, you guys are really good about identifying yourself, I think that would be fine.” (RYR1) | |
| Open, with conditions FBN1 12 (60%) RYR1 8 (40%) | “Yes, provided I had the opportunity to alert them to that and get their permission … they would certainly have the right to refuse” (FBN1) |
| “Yeah. Go ahead and they can contact the family member. I’d prefer to do it first, but it’s important enough that they should be contacted anyway.” (RYR1) | |
| Not open to this* FBN1: 1(5%) RYR1: 1 (5%) | “No. I would do it ... they would be angry and upset and hurt if they did not get that information from me.” |
| “Nope. That’s my job.” (RYR1) | |
| Not sure: 0 | N/A |
| KPWA contacts family member’s KPWA physician | |
| Open FBN1: 6 (30%) RYR1: 10 (50%) | “Absolutely ... I would think that that would be even more efficient than me sending a message that would not be very precise, you know, it would not fill in a lot of gaps. So it makes sense to have somebody with the data, the actual data provide the information.” (FBN1) |
| “That’s, you know, I think—physician to physicians, fine.” (RYR1) | |
| Open, with conditions FBN1: 11 (55%) RYR1: 8 (40%) | “I think I’d rather have that conversation with the family members first and see, you know, what their preferences were.” (FBN1) |
| “I would say I would have to talk to them first and see if they would want their physicians to know what’s going on. I do not know why they would not, but still, I guess it’s a privacy thing.” (RYR1) | |
| Not open to this FBN1: 2 (10%) RYR1: 2 (10%) | “No ... that one I do not want to cross I think. I do not want to cross that line.” (FBN1) |
| “Yeah, not comfortable [with this].” (RYR1) | |
Not sure FBN1: 1 (5%) RYR1: 0 | “I do not know. Maybe I would not—I am not sure. … Well, I really do not know.” (FBN1) |
| KPWA places notes in family member’s EMR | |
| Open FBN1: 5 (25%) RYR1: 8 (40%) | “Yeah. I think that’s a good thing. I really think that it’s important for people to know what sort of things they might be at risk for, since they have the technology to find out some things now. I think it’s a good thing.” (FBN1) “If I delay in talking with [my relatives], then that’s on me. But it’s more important the note be there then to have less worry. And there should be less worry anyway.” (RYR1) |
| “In this case I think it’s a little more serious [than FBN1]. It seems like if you are likely to die—surgeries are more and more common. And it seems to me that [KPWA placing note in relatives’ EMR] that would be an appropriate thing to do.” (RYR1) | |
| Open, with conditions FBN1: 10 (50%) RYR1: 9 (45%) | “I am fine with it. I probably would have to check with my siblings and make sure they are okay with it. I would not want them to be surprised or, you know, why was a note there and not know about it.” (FBN1) |
| “I would talk to them first and say what do you think, if they can do that. Or can—I was going to say, or can the doctor give you a letter to put in your file.” (RYR1) | |
| Not open to this FBN1: 3 (15%) RYR1: 3 (15%) | “No, I do not want to put things in other people’s medical records.” (FBN1) “And putting a note in the medical record, I would, you know, it’s a little—it’s—I would still not opt for that. I still think that would be risky in this uncertain political climate.” (RYR1) |
| Not sure FBN1: 2 (10%) RYR1:0 | “I think the first thing to come to mind when you say that would be; would that, in any way, affect their access to insurance?” (FBN1) |
*Single participant
Relative matching results
| Total | 57 | 100.0% |
|---|---|---|
| Single match of a KPWA member on last name + first name | 29 | 50.9% |
| Additional single match adding birthyear | 7 | 12.3% |
| Additional single match birthyear + birth month | 2 | 3.5% |
| Single match on last name + birthdate only | 2 | 3.5% |
| Total single matches | 40 | 70.2% |
| Matched on 2–11 KPWA members | 7 | 12.3% |
| Matched on 12 or more KPWA members (range 29–169, mean 137)* | 10 | 17.5% |
*All people who did not match last name + first name