| Literature DB >> 36096833 |
Ahmed Edris1, Evi Callier1, Lies Lahousse2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Personalized medicine is an emerging field, aiming to improve the safety and efficacy of pharmacotherapy. The field's implementation in clinical care is steadily increasing. Pharmacogenomics are one example of personalized approaches in the clinic and direct-to-consumer (DTC) pharmacogenomic tests have become publicly available. We aimed to assess public opinion on pharmacogenomic research and testing to foster integration within Belgian health care.Entities:
Keywords: Patient perspective; Pharmacogenetics; Public attitude; Research engagement; Survey
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36096833 PMCID: PMC9466314 DOI: 10.1186/s12920-022-01308-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.622
Participants characteristics
| Characteristics | Total N (%) 156 (100%) |
|---|---|
| Sex | |
| Male | 42 (26.9%) |
| Female | |
| Age | |
| 18 – 30 | |
| 31 – 50 | 38 (24.4%) |
| 51 – 70 | 31 (19.9%) |
| 70 + | 2 (1.3%) |
| Education level | |
| Elementary or primary degree | 2 (1.3%) |
| High school degree | |
| College degree | 38 (24.4%) |
| University degree | 54 (34.6%) |
| Doctorate | 4 (2.6%) |
| Number of average daily drugs | |
| 0 | 74 (47.4%) |
| 1 – 5 | |
| 5 + | 4 (2.6%) |
| Experienced side-effects due to their drugs | |
| Yes | |
| No | 34 (21.8%) |
| Not that I know of | 41 (26.3%) |
| Not applicable | 9 (5.8%) |
| Stopped their drug because of side-effects1 | |
| Yes | 56 (35.6%) |
| No | 19 (12.2%) |
| Not applicable | |
| Experienced treatment failure | |
| Yes | |
| No | 29 (18.6%) |
| Not that I know of | 36 (23.1%) |
| Not applicable | 9 (5.8%) |
| Stopped their drug due to treatment failure1 | |
| Yes | 70 (44.9%) |
| No | 15 (9.6%) |
| Not applicable | |
The bold entries denote the largest proportion for every question
Fig. 1Participants ranking of factors affecting medication response
Fig. 2Preferred purpose of a pharmacogenomic test according to participants
Participant responses to pharmacogenomic test statements
| Completely disagree | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | Completely agree | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmacogenomic tests could help improve health care | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 20 (12.8%) | 48 (30.8%) | |
| Pharmacogenomic tests could be an important aid during health care research | 1 (0.6%) | 1 (0.6%) | 8 (5.1%) | 60 (38.5%) | |
| I would feel more at ease taking a drug if pharmacogenomic tests have proved the drug is safe and effective for me | 1 (0.6%) | 4 (2.6%) | 26 (16.7%) | 53 (34,0%) | |
| I would improve my medication-adherence if pharmacogenomic tests have proved the drug is safe and effective for me | 3 (1.9%) | 26 (16.7%) | 43 (27.6%) | 30 (19.2%) | |
| I would worry about my privacy if my genetic data is saved in my central medical record | 33 (21.2%) | 38 (24.4%) | 18 (11.5.5%) | 6 (3.8%) | |
| I would prefer it if all my genetic factors are analysed in one test, making more information available, than having only the parts of my genetics analysed that could be relevant for my drugs | 8 (5.1%) | 16 (10.3%) | 32 (20.5%) | 35 (22.4%) | |
| I would like to limit the amount of health care practitioners that have access to my test results | 8 (5.1%) | 31 (19.9%) | 42 (26.9%) | 28 (17.9%) | |
| I would like a direct availability of my test results for my health care practitioners | 4 (2.6%) | 15 (9.6%) | 29 (18.6%) | 20 (12.8%) | |
| I would be willing to pay €100 for a pharmacogenomic test | 11 (7.1%) | 38 (24.4%) | 41 (26.3%) | 11 (7.1%) | |
| I would be willing to take a pharmacogenomic test if this was partially reimbursed | 4 (2.6%) | 5 (3.2%) | 28 (17.9%) | 33 (21.2%) | |
| I would be willing to take a pharmacogenomic test if this was completely reimbursed | 1 (0.6%) | 3 (1.9%) | 13 (8.3%) | 60 (38.5%) |
Fig. 3Importance of factors affecting participant’s willingness to engage in pharmacogenomic research