| Literature DB >> 34062946 |
Karen E Wain1, Kasia Tolwinski2, Emily Palen1, Alexis R Heidlebaugh1, Karahlyn Holdren1, Lauren Kasparson Walsh1, Matthew T Oetjens1, David H Ledbetter1, Christa Lese Martin1.
Abstract
Genomic variants that cause neurodevelopmental/psychiatric disorders (NPD) are relatively prevalent and highly penetrant. This study aimed to understand adults' immediate responses to receiving NPD-related results to inform inclusion in population-based genomic screening programs. Nine recurrent, pathogenic copy number variants (CNVs) were identified from research exome data, clinically confirmed, and disclosed to adult participants of the Geisinger MyCode Community Health Initiative DiscovEHR cohort by experienced genetic counselors. A subset of in-person genetic counseling sessions (n = 27) were audio-recorded, transcribed, and coded using a grounded theory approach. Participant reactions were overwhelmingly positive and indicated that an NPD genetic etiology was highly valuable and personally useful. Participants frequently reported learning disabilities or other NPD that were not documented in their electronic health records and noted difficulties obtaining support for NPD needs. Most intended to share their genetic result with family members and health care providers and were interested in how their result could improve their healthcare. This study indicates that results from population-based NPD genomic screening can provide personal value for adults with NPD, were viewed positively by participants, and could improve clinical outcomes by informing symptom monitoring for NPD and co-morbidities, promoting improved health behaviors, and enhancing psychotherapeutic approaches.Entities:
Keywords: brain disorders; copy number variant; genomic screening; neuropsychiatric disorders; personal utility
Year: 2021 PMID: 34062946 PMCID: PMC8147408 DOI: 10.3390/jpm11050365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Adult participant demographics and NPD diagnoses from the EHR.
| Study ID | Deletion | Sex | Age in Years at Disclosure | NPD Diagnoses in EHR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADMI01 | 16p13.11 | F | 49 | Anxiety, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI02 | 16p13.11 | M | 49 | Generalized anxiety disorder, Panic disorder without agoraphobia, Adjustment disorder with anxiety, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI03 | 16p13.11 | F | 63 | Adjustment disorder with depression, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI04 | 16p11.2 | M | 70 | Adjustment disorder, Intellectual disability |
| ADMI05 | 1q21.1 | F | 51 | Anxiety, Adjustment disorder with depressed mood, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI06 | 16p11.2 | M | 23 | Unspecified disturbance of conduct, ADHD, Other specific developmental learning difficulties, Unspecified delay in development |
| ADMI07 | 17q11.2 | F | 54 | Major depressive affective disorder-recurrent, Unspecified episodic mood disorder, Anxiety, Adjustment disorder with depressed mood, Depressive disorder, ADD |
| ADMI08 | 16p11.2 | F | 56 | Adjustment disorder with depressed mood, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI09 | 16p13.11 | F | 42 | Major depressive affective disorder-recurrent episode-severe-specified as with psychotic behavior, Borderline personality disorder, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI10 | 22q11.2 | M | 34 | Unspecified intellectual disability, Mild cognitive impairment, Epilepsy |
| ADMI11 | 16p11.2 | M | 62 | Anxiety, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI12 | 1q21.1 | F | 55 | Generalized anxiety disorder |
| ADMI13 | 16p11.2 | F | 29 | Depressive disorder |
| ADMI14 | 16p11.2 | F | 52 | Generalized anxiety disorder, Depressive disorder |
| ADMI15 | 1q21.1 | F | 61 | Depression |
| ADMI16 | 17q12 | F | 32 | Mood disorder, Adjustment disorder, Panic disorder |
| ADMI17 | 16p11.2 | M | 44 | Mild intellectual disability, Epilepsy, Panic disorder |
| ADMI18 | 15q13.3 | M | 37 | Anxiety, Major depressive affective disorder, Epilepsy |
| ADMI19 | 16p11.2 | M | 49 | Convulsive epilepsy |
| ADMI20 | 16p11.2 | M | 37 | Mild cognitive impairment, Generalized anxiety disorder, Obsessive compulsive disorder, Tourette’s, Major depressive disorder, Disturbance of conduct |
| ADMI21 | 16p11.2 | M | 75 | Anxiety, Major depression, Acute reaction to stress |
| ADMI22 | 16p11.2 | F | 55 | Depression, Anxiety |
| ADMI23 | 16p13.11 | M | 24 | Unspecified intellectual disabilities, Delayed milestones, Epilepsy, Speech/language disorder, ADHD, Anxiety, Obsessive-compulsive disorder, Tic disorder |
| ADMI24 | 16p13.11 | F | 56 | Generalized anxiety disorder, Depression |
| ADMI25 | 16p13.11 | F | 27 | Anxiety, Epilepsy, Adjustment disorder, Chronic depressive personality disorder, Major depressive disorder |
| ADMI26 | 16p13.11 | F | 33 | Adjustment disorder, Depression, Dysthymic disorder, Generalized anxiety disorder, Bipolar disorder |
| ADMI27 | 16p13.11 | F | 53 | Major depressive disorder, Borderline personality disorder, Generalized anxiety disorder |
| ADMI28 | 16p13.11 | F | 69 | Depression, Panic disorder |
NPD—neurodevelopmental/psychiatric disorder; EHR—electronic health record; F—female; M—male; ADHD—attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADD—attention deficit disorder.
Seven main themes representing participant responses to receiving NPD-related CNVs from 27 genetic counseling sessions.
| Theme Description |
|---|
| NPD genomic information was inherently valuable (27 sessions) |
| Lifelong NPD challenges were discussed openly (27 sessions) |
| NPD genomic information fit with participants’ lived experiences (23 sessions) |
| Previously held causal attributions for personal and family NPD histories were common (26 sessions) |
| Negative emotions were less prominent than positive emotions and were associated with NPD-related lived experience rather than the genetic result (26 sessions) |
| NPD genomic information was received with a resilient attitude (17 sessions) |
| Interest in the implications of NPD genomic information on clinical management (17 sessions) |
NPD—neurodevelopmental/psychiatric disorder; CNV—copy number variant.
Figure 1Neurodevelopmental/psychiatric diagnoses there were documented in participants’ electronic health record (EHR) versus participant reported diagnoses that were absent from the EHR. NPD—neurodevelopmental/psychiatric disorder; OCD—obsessive compulsive disorder; ID—intellectual disability; ADHD—attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; ADD—attention deficit disorder.