| Literature DB >> 34446836 |
Alexandra Cernat1,2, Robin Z Hayeems1,2, Wendy J Ungar3,4.
Abstract
Cascade genetic testing is the identification of individuals at risk for a hereditary condition by genetic testing in relatives of people known to possess particular genetic variants. Cascade testing has health system implications, however cascade costs and health effects are not considered in health technology assessments (HTAs) that focus on costs and health consequences in individual patients. Cascade health service use must be better understood to be incorporated in HTA of emerging genetic tests for children. The purpose of this review was to characterise published research related to patterns and costs of cascade health service use by relatives of children with any condition diagnosed through genetic testing. To this end, a scoping literature review was conducted. Citation databases were searched for English-language papers reporting uptake, costs, downstream health service use, or cost-effectiveness of cascade investigations of relatives of children who receive a genetic diagnosis. Included publications were critically appraised, and findings were synthesised. Twenty publications were included. Sixteen had a paediatric proband population; four had a combined paediatric and adult proband population. Uptake of cascade testing varied across diseases, from 37% for cystic fibrosis, 39% to 65% for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and 90% for rare monogenic conditions. Two studies evaluated costs. It was concluded that cascade testing in the child-to-parent direction has been reported in a variety of diseases, and that understanding the scope of cascade testing will aid in the design and conduct of HTA of emerging genetic technologies to better inform funding and policy decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34446836 PMCID: PMC8560854 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-021-00952-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Nineteen records were identified through an electronic search of Medline and Embase, of which 11 proceeded to full-text review. An additional 17 articles were retrieved through hand-searching. A total of 20 studies were included in the review.
Included studies conducted in cardiovascular conditions.
| Author [ref.] | Study location | Disease state | Focus of study | Proband population | Included relatives | Main findings/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knight et al. [ | United States | LQTS and HCM | • Uptake and yield of genetic testing in children with LQTS or HCM • Uptake and yield of cascade genetic testing | • 168 children with LQTS, mean age ± standard deviation (SD): 8.4 ± 5.7 years • 147 children with HCM, mean age ± SD: 9.4 ± 6.1 years | • 553 relatives | Probands: • 92% with LQTS underwent genetic testing; 81% positive • 65% with HCM underwent genetic testing; 60% positive Relatives: • 46% clinical screening only; 38% clinical screening and genetic testing; 17% genetic testing only → 1.6 cascade interventions per relative • 40% of all relatives positive • Larger proportion positive among LQTS families than HCM families (42% vs. 37%) • Higher yield with combined cascade screening and genetic testing than cascade screening or genetic testing alone |
| Truong et al. [ | Vietnam | FH | • Outcomes of cascade genetic testing | • 2 children, aged 4 and 8 years • 3 adults, aged 28, 33, and 42 years | • 107 first- and second-degree relatives from 4 families | Relatives: • 83% underwent cascade genetic testing; 52% positive |
| Wu et al. [ | China | FH | • Yield of cascade genetic testing and screening | • 47 consecutive paediatric patients, mean age ± SD: 9.1 ± 4.8 years | • 70 parents • 10 siblings • 46 second-degree relatives | Relatives: • 100% first-degree positive and 89% second-degree positive → mean yield of cascade genetic testing: 2.8 new FH cases per proband |
| Wald et al. [ | United Kingdom | FH | • Feasibility of child-to-parent FH screening in primary care settings | • 10,095 children tested, median age: 12.7 years; 37 children positive for FH variant; 32 participated | • 64 parents | Parents: • 63% positive • For every 1,000 children screened, 8 individuals (4 children and 4 parents) had positive cascade test or screen |
| Alfares et al. [ | United States | HCM | • Results of genetic testing for non-syndromic HCM in probands and family members | • 2,912 paediatric and adult probands referred for HCM genetic testing, no age information available | • 1,209 asymptomatic relatives | Probands: • 32% positive (28% paediatric) • 15% inconclusive Asymptomatic family members of mutation-positive probands: • 57% negative → no longer needed cardiac evaluations → health systems savings of ~US $1,000 per relative |
| Miller et al. [ | United States | HCM and DCM | • Uptake of cardiac screening and genetic testing among at-risk relatives • Factors influencing uptake of cascade genetic testing | • 57 paediatric and adult probands (46 HCM and 11 DCM), mean age (range): 15 (0.02–64) years | • 302 first- and second-degree relatives | Probands: • 40/57 positive Relatives of mutation-positive probands: • 39% underwent cascade genetic testing • 59% underwent cascade screening • Uptake of cascade services greater in first-degree than second-degree relatives • No statistically significant association between proband’s age at diagnosis, family history of SCD, and number of living affected relatives, with uptake of cascade genetic testing • No statistically significant association between proband’s genetic testing results and uptake of cascade clinical screening |
| Leren et al. [ | Norway | FH | • Outcome of cascade genetic testing | • 188 paediatric and adult index patients | • 851 relatives, “primarily” first-degree | Relatives: • 47.9% positive • 78/146 affected relatives used test results to change medications |
DCM dilated cardiomyopathy, FH familial hypercholesterolaemia, HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, LQTS long QT syndrome.
Included studies conducted in other monogenic conditions.
| Author [ref.] | Study location | Disease state | Focus of study | Proband population | Included relatives | Main findings/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stark et al. [ | Australia | Rare monogenic disorders | • Clinical and cost impacts of genomic sequencing in infants with suspected monogenic disorders | • Paediatric (number not specified), mean age (range): 8 months (1 week–34 months) | • 88 first-degree relatives | Relatives: • 90% underwent genetic testing (total cost: AU $28,000) • 2 first-degree relatives changed medical management based on genetic test results (yearly costs: AU $146 and AU $329) • 16 couples accessed reproductive genetic services (total cost: AU $56,904.37) |
| Famula et al. [ | United States | Fragile X syndrome | • Identification of affected child through newborn screening • Outcome of cascade genetic testing | • 1 child, aged 3 months | • 3 family members (mother and 2 siblings) | Relatives: • all 3 relatives found to have full |
| McClaren et al. [ | Australia | CF | • Uptake of relative carrier testing and factors influencing uptake | • 30 children, ages not reported | • 225 relatives | Relatives: • 37% underwent carrier testing |
| Sorensen et al. [ | United States | Fragile X syndrome | • Description of pilot project: newborn screening followed by cascade testing • Detailed description of 3 newborns identified as having Fragile X syndrome premutation | • 3,024 newborns screened; 14 positive • 3 newborns described in detail, aged 5 months, 5 months, and 6 months | • 44 relatives of variant-positive probands | Relatives: • 27/44 (61%) positive |
| Moriwaki et al. [ | Japan | XP-A | • Experience of 1 centre with prenatal diagnosis of XP-A | • 12 children from 9 families, mean age (range): 3.83 (1–11) years | • 10 fetuses in utero | Fetuses: • 2/10 XP confirmed • 6/10 XP carriers • 2/10 unaffected |
| Sorensen et al. [ | United States | Fragile X syndrome | • Description of fragile X syndrome sibship • Outcome of cascade genetic testing | • Brother and sister pair; brother was true proband, aged 9.75 years | First- and second-degree relatives (number not specified) | Relatives: • Parents both carriers • Third sibling unaffected • Maternal grandmothers obligate carriers |
| McClaren et al. [ | Australia | CF | • Uptake of cascade genetic testing by non-parent adult relatives | • 30 children, ages not reported | • 59 parents • 716 non-parent first- and second-degree relatives | Parents: • 64.4% underwent genetic testing Non-parent relatives: • 11.5% underwent genetic testing • 2.7 relatives tested per child • Female relatives 1.61 times more likely than males to undergo cascade testing |
| Smith et al. [ | Australia | SMA | • Carrier frequency of SMA in Australia | • Paediatric (number not specified), ages not reported | • 117 parents of affected children • 158 individuals with family history • 146 individuals without family history | • SMA carrier frequency ~1/49 |
| Rudolph et al. [ | Germany | X-linked ocular albinism | • Outcomes of genetic testing and clinical screening | • 1 male, aged 8 months | • 22 relatives | Family members: • 6 male relatives affected • 6 other relatives identified as obligate carriers |
CF cystic fibrosis, SMA spinal muscular atrophy, XP-A xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group A.
Included studies conducted in haematologic conditions.
| Author [ref.] | Study location | Disease state | Focus of study | Proband population | Included relatives | Main findings/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tairaku et al. [ | Japan | • Severe congenital protein C deficiency | • Outcome of prenatal diagnosis in sibling of affected child | • 1 child, aged 3 years | 1 foetus in utero | Foetus: • Heterozygous carrier; would not experience symptoms |
| Gorakshakar and Colah [ | India | • β-thalassaemia | • Uptake and results of cascade screening | • Paediatric, number of affected children not specified 490 children from “high risk” communities, ages not reported | • 691 relatives from 44 families, including 25 siblings of index cases | Children from “high risk” communities: • 96/490 (20%) heterozygotes Relatives: • Among siblings of index cases, 10/25 (40%) heterozygotes |
| Baig et al. [ | Pakistan | • β-thalassaemia | • Cascade genetic testing results | • 1 child, age not reported | • 27 relatives | Relatives: • 44.4% carriers |
| Cadet et al. [ | France | • HH | • Yield of cascade testing and screening of at-risk adults identified through neonatal screening of infants | • Neonatal (number not specified) | • 11 families of • 10 families of heterozygous infants • Number/type of relatives not described | Families of homozygous infants: • 5 relatives from 4 families homozygous Families of heterozygous infants: • 5 relatives from 2 families homozygous • 6/10 homozygous relatives began treatment; 4/10 homozygous relatives under surveillance |
HH hereditary hemochromatosis.
aHH-conferring variant.