| Literature DB >> 32341469 |
Carla Roma Oliveira1,2, Álvaro Mendes3, Jorge Sequeiros4, Liliana Sousa5.
Abstract
Huntington disease (HD) is a rare progressive neurological disease, with no cure, inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, significantly impacting family relations, health and well-being. So far, no studies have reported how Portuguese families deal with information about HD, from a transgenerational perspective. This qualitative study aims to fill in that gap, and focuses on how families acquire knowledge about HD and management of information within the family and in their social relationships. The study adopted semi-structured interviews with 10 participants from HD families. Interviews were transcribed and analysed thematically. Findings suggested that management of information in the family started with the search for a diagnosis in an affected family member. Diagnosis led to a process of "making sense of HD in the family", which activated a transgenerational process to understand HD in the family context, marked by improved awareness and different ways family members manage it (closedness and openness). These results should be relevant for health-care professionals, bringing further insight into the process of acquiring knowledge about HD, and highlighting the relevance of continued efforts for enhanced pre- and post-test counselling and ongoing support to the HD families.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32341469 PMCID: PMC7608350 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-020-0630-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246
Demographic and social data and disease status of participants.
| Family | Participant (interviewee) and kinship | Details of the families’ relational context | Age | Gender | Schooling |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F1 | P1 | P1 is spouse of an affected-carrier (1st family diagnosis 10 years ago); presumes HD was inherited from spouses’ undiagnosed mother. No children. | 67 | M | 12 years |
| F2 | P2 (daughter of P4) | P2 (non-carrier) is P4’s daughter; P4 is spouse of an affected-carrier (diagnosed 5 years ago); HD was inherited from P4’s mother-in-law (unknown diagnosis date); P4 has two other children who have not undertaken PST (one ≤ 18). | 29 | F | University degree |
| P4 (mother of P2) | 60 | F | University degree | ||
| F3 | P3 (sister-in law with P6) | P3 and P6 are sisters-in-law; P3 is the spouse of a non-carrier and daughter-in-law of an affected carrier (father-in-law; 1st family diagnosis 10 years ago); P6 is the spouse of an affected-carrier (diagnosed 8 years ago). HD presumed to have been inherited from P6 spouses’ undiagnosed grandfather. P6 has one child (who has not undertaken PST). | 44 | F | 12 years |
| P6 (sister-in-law with P3) | 43 | F | 8 years | ||
| F4 | P5 | P5 is a non-carrier, daughter of an affected carrier (mother; 1st family diagnosis 5 years ago); HD is presumed to have been inherited from her symptomatic but undiagnosed maternal grandfather. P5 has two other sisters (one non-carrier; the other has not undertaken PST). | 28 | F | University degree |
| F5 | P7 (niece of P9) | P7 is an asymptomatic carrier (PST 11 years ago). P7 is P9’s (non-biological) niece. P7’s mother is an affected carrier (diagnosed 14 years ago), who inherited HD from her diagnosed father (1st family diagnosis, for over 20 years). P9’s spouse (P7’s biological aunt) has never undertaken PST and is asymptomatic. P9 has no children. | 33 | F | University degree |
| P9 (uncle of P7) | 72 | M | 7 years | ||
| F6 | P8 | P8 is an asymptomatic carrier (PST 6 years ago). P8’s father was an affected carrier (1st family diagnosis 6 years ago); HD is presumed to have been inherited from P8’s symptomatic though undiagnosed paternal grandmother. P8 has another sister (who has not undertaken PST). | 37 | F | University degree |
| F7 | P10 | P10 is the ex-spouse of an affected carrier (1st family diagnosis 14 years ago); she has a carrier son (diagnosed 6 years ago) and a daughter who still doesn’t know her disease status (≤18); HD inherited from the ex-spouse’s (asymptomatic) carrier father (diagnosis made after his son’s). | 46 | F | 12 years |