| Literature DB >> 34385671 |
Karuna R M van der Meij1, Annabel Njio1, Linda Martin2, Janneke T Gitsels-van der Wal2, Mireille N Bekker3, Elsbeth H van Vliet-Lachotzki4, A Jeanine E M van der Ven5, Adriana Kater-Kuipers1, Danielle R M Timmermans6, Erik A Sistermans1, Robert-Jan H Galjaard7, Lidewij Henneman8.
Abstract
Due to the favorable test characteristics of the non-invasive prenatal test (NIPT) in the screening of fetal aneuploidy, there has been a strong and growing demand for implementation. In the Netherlands, NIPT is offered within a governmentally supported screening program as a first-tier screening test for all pregnant women (TRIDENT-2 study). However, concerns have been raised that the test's favorable characteristics might lead to uncritical use, also referred to as routinization. This study addresses women's perspectives on prenatal screening with NIPT by evaluating three aspects related to routinization: informed choice, freedom to choose and (personal and societal) perspectives on Down syndrome. Nationwide, a questionnaire was completed by 751 pregnant women after receiving counseling for prenatal screening. Of the respondents, the majority (75.5%) made an informed choice for prenatal screening as measured by the multidimensional measure of informed choice (MMIC). Education level and religious affiliation were significant predictors of informed choice. The main reason to accept screening was "seeking reassurance" (25.5%), and the main reason to decline was "every child is welcome" (30.6%). The majority of respondents (87.7%) did not perceive societal pressure to test. Differences between test-acceptors and test-decliners in personal and societal perspectives on Down syndrome were found. Our study revealed high rates of informed decision-making and perceived freedom to choose regarding fetal aneuploidy screening, suggesting that there is little reason for concern about routinization of NIPT based on the perspectives of Dutch pregnant women. Our findings highlight the importance of responsible implementation of NIPT within a national screening program.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34385671 PMCID: PMC9177612 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-021-00940-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 5.351
Fig. 1Three clusters of possible routinization of NIPT, adapted from Kater-Kuipers et al. [15].
The clusters comprise: Informed choice, Freedom to choose and Consequences for people with a disability.
Dimensions of informed choice.
| Knowledge | Deliberation | Attitude | Uptakea | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informed choice | ||||
| Good | Deliberated | Positive | NIPT | 351 (68.3) |
| Good | Deliberated | Negative | No test | 28 (5.5) |
| Good | Deliberated | Positive | FCT | 8 (1.5) |
| Uninformed choice | ||||
| Good | Not deliberated | Positive | NIPT | 48 (9.3) |
| Insufficient | Deliberated | Positive | NIPT | 46 (8.9) |
| Insufficient | Deliberated | Negative | No test | 12 (2.3) |
| Insufficient | Not deliberated | Positive | NIPT | 9 (1.7) |
| Good | Not deliberated | Positive | FCT | 3 (0.6) |
| Insufficient | Deliberated | Positive | FCT | 2 (0.4) |
| Insufficient | Not deliberated | Negative | No test | 2 (0.4) |
| Good | Deliberated | Positive | No test | 2 (0.4) |
| Insufficient | Deliberated | Positive | No test | 1 (0.2) |
| Insufficient | Not deliberated | Positive | No test | 1 (0.2) |
| Good | Not deliberated | Negative | No test | 1 (0.2) |
FCT first-trimester combined test, NIPT non-invasive prenatal test.
aMeasured as intention to test.
Reasons for accepting (n = 1491) or declining (n = 271) fetal aneuploidy screening.
| Reasons for accepting screening | Responses (% of cases) | Reasons for declining screening | Responses (% of cases) |
|---|---|---|---|
| I want to be reassured that my child does not have Down, Edwards, or Patau syndrome | 380 (25.5%) | Every child is welcome; a child with Down, Edwards, or Patau syndrome as well | 83 (30.6%) |
| I want to have as much information as possible about the health of my baby | 340 (22.8%) | I would never terminate my pregnancy | 57 (21.0%) |
| I do not want to have a child with Edwards or Patau syndrome | 257 (17.2%) | I think I have a low risk of having a child with Down syndrome | 28 (10.3%) |
| I do not want to have a child with Down syndrome | 186 (12.5%) | I am afraid I will regret testing when faced with an abortion decision | 24 (8.9%) |
| I want to be able to prepare myself for the birth of a child with Down, Edwards, or Patau syndrome | 145 (9.7%) | I think the tests are too expensive | 17 (6.3%) |
| I am worried I will regret not testing later on | 80 (5.4%) | I do not want to know if my child has a disorder | 16 (5.9%) |
| My partner, family, or others want to test | 66 (4.4%) | Because of my religion or faith | 16 (5.9%) |
| Other | 19 (1.3%) | I am not worried about my child’s health | 14 (5.2%) |
| I think I have a high risk of having a child with Down syndrome | 15 (1.0%) | I think the tests are not reliablea | 7 (2.6%) |
| My midwife or doctor thinks it is a good idea | 3 (0.2%) | I do not want to unnecessarily worrya | 6 (2.2%) |
| Other | 3 (1.1%) | ||
| My partner, family or others do not want to test | 0 (0.0%) | ||
| My midwife or doctor thinks it is not a good idea | 0 (0.0%) |
aAdded reason based on other responses.
Perceived societal pressure to test among test-acceptors (n = 602) and test-decliners (n = 129).
| (Totally) agree | Neither agree nor disagree | (Totally) disagree | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Test-acceptors | |||
| I feel societal pressure to accept screening | 19 (3.2) | 55 (9.2) | 525 (87.6) |
| I feel societal pressure to decline screening | 44 (7.4) | 79 (13.2) | 474 (79.4) |
| Test-decliners | |||
| I feel societal pressure to accept screening | 19 (15.1) | 21 (16.7) | 86 (68.3) |
| I feel societal pressure to decline screening | 5 (4.0) | 23 (18.3) | 98 (77.8) |
Respondents’ characteristics.
| Maternal age (missing 4) | |
| ≤30 | 290 (38.8) |
| 31–35 | 317 (42.4) |
| ≥36 | 140 (18.7) |
| Education level (missing 4)a | |
| Low | 38 (5.1) |
| Intermediate | 226 (30.3) |
| High | 483 (64.7) |
| Ethnicity (missing 4)b | |
| Dutch | 633 (84.7) |
| Other western | 61 (8.2) |
| Non-western | 53 (7.1) |
| Religious affiliation (missing 10)c | |
| Not religious | 496 (66.9) |
| Religious | 245 (33.1) |
| Health literacy (missing 9)d | |
| Adequate | 643 (86.7) |
| Not adequate | 99 (13.3) |
| Gestational age (missing 5) | |
| ≤10 | 285 (38.2) |
| 11–14 | 425 (57.0) |
| ≥15 | 36 (4.8) |
| Parity (missing 4) | |
| Nulliparous | 372 (49.7) |
| Multiparous | 376 (50.3) |
| Method of conception (missing 6)e | |
| Natural | 671 (90.9) |
| Assisted | 74 (9.9) |
| Screening intention | |
| NIPT | 587 (78.2) |
| FCT | 15 (2.0) |
| No test | 129 (17.2) |
| Not sure | 20 (2.7) |
FCT first-trimester combined test, NIPT non-invasive prenatal test.
aEducation levels categorized as low: elementary school, low level secondary school, or lower vocational training; intermediate: high-level secondary school or intermediate vocational training; high: high vocational training or university.
bEthnicity categorized as Dutch: both parents were born in the Netherlands; other Western: one or both parents were born in Europe (excluding Turkey), North America, Oceania, Indonesia or Japan; non-Western: one or both parents were born in Africa, Latin-America, Asia (excluding Indonesia or Japan) or Turkey. Maternal country of birth was leading if both parents were born abroad.
cReligious affiliation was measured by the question “which denomination or ideology do you consider yourself as?” Answers were dichotomized: having no religious affiliation if answered “none” or having a religious affiliation if an affiliation was selected.
dHealth literacy classified as inadequate if answered anything other than “never” or “occasionally” on one or more questions.
eMethod of conception considered assisted: intrauterine insemination (n = 28), ovulation-induction (n = 21), in vitro fertilization (n = 11), intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (n = 10) or preimplantation genetic diagnosis (n = 6).
Fig. 2Personal and societal perspectives on Down syndrome of test-acceptors (n = 602) and test-decliners (n = 129).
Level of agreement among test-acceptors and test-decliners regarding five statements.