Population Genomic Screening for Genetic Etiologies of Neurodevelopmental/Psychiatric Disorders Demonstrates Personal Utility and Positive Participant Responses
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. CNV Detection and Genetic Counseling Disclosure Process
2.2. Qualitative Analysis of Audio-Recorded In-Person Genetic Counseling Sessions
3. Results
3.1. NPD Genetic Information Was Inherently Valuable
3.2. Lifelong NPD Challenges Were Discussed Openly
“I was a slow learner, I know that, even in high school I can remember that. I didn’t comprehend quickly. Things just didn’t sink in and they still don’t. I just have a hard time sitting still for a very long time and trying to comprehend what it is I’m reading.”(ADMI07, Female, 17q11.2 del)
“There’s other times where I would just snap just for no reason, just literally just go off the deep, just something would just hit me the wrong way and I would just go off for no reason. Then after the fact it would bother me and really upset me to where I would actually shut down myself and just stay away from people. […] I lost several jobs because of [depression and alcoholism].”(ADMI02, Male, 16p13.11 del)
“At work I get mad because one of my coworkers, something’s wrong or whatever, I’m trying to cope with it because I don’t want to go off on someone the wrong way and ruin it, get fired, or ruin a relationship or whatever.”(ADMI06, Male, 16p11.2 del)
“When I was in school they just went, ‘You have [ADHD],’ and sent me away. It took a long time to get medicine because doctors back then didn’t really want to prescribe.”(ADMI18, Male, 15q13.3 del)
“Oh, when I hear about other women that have been in the same [social situation] that have gone out and started their own companies and done things like that, I feel really inadequate, and what I want to do more than anything is make my kids proud, and I’m not doing that, and I want to show them that it is possible to rise from the ashes. I don’t see a way of doing that, because I can’t go to school because I’m not cut out for it.”(ADMI01, Female, 16p13.11 del)
3.3. NPD Genetic Information Fit with Participants’ Lived Experiences
3.4. Previously Held Causal Attributions for Personal and Family NPD Histories Were Common
3.5. Negative Emotions Were Less Prominent than Positive Emotions and Were Associated with NPD-Related Lived Experiences Rather than the Genetic Result
3.6. NPD Genetic Information Was Received with a Resilient Attitude
“I mean we’re comfortable with who we are and we’re old enough to not be overly worried. We’re all self-sufficient. We can do life. We were smart outside of school, so I quit and I enrolled in cosmetology school. Like I said, I did really well.”(ADMI01, Female, 16p13.11 del)
“You just have to know your own barriers to jump over that hurdle to see if you can broaden it so you can learn how you learn.”(ADMI06, Male, 16p11.2 del)
3.7. Interest in the Implications of NPD Genetic Information on Clinical Management
4. Discussion
Study Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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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 |
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) |
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Wain, K.E.; Tolwinski, K.; Palen, E.; Heidlebaugh, A.R.; Holdren, K.; Walsh, L.K.; Oetjens, M.T.; Ledbetter, D.H.; Martin, C.L. Population Genomic Screening for Genetic Etiologies of Neurodevelopmental/Psychiatric Disorders Demonstrates Personal Utility and Positive Participant Responses. J. Pers. Med. 2021, 11, 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050365
Wain KE, Tolwinski K, Palen E, Heidlebaugh AR, Holdren K, Walsh LK, Oetjens MT, Ledbetter DH, Martin CL. Population Genomic Screening for Genetic Etiologies of Neurodevelopmental/Psychiatric Disorders Demonstrates Personal Utility and Positive Participant Responses. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2021; 11(5):365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050365
Chicago/Turabian StyleWain, Karen E., Kasia Tolwinski, Emily Palen, Alexis R. Heidlebaugh, Karahlyn Holdren, Lauren Kasparson Walsh, Matthew T. Oetjens, David H. Ledbetter, and Christa Lese Martin. 2021. "Population Genomic Screening for Genetic Etiologies of Neurodevelopmental/Psychiatric Disorders Demonstrates Personal Utility and Positive Participant Responses" Journal of Personalized Medicine 11, no. 5: 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050365
APA StyleWain, K. E., Tolwinski, K., Palen, E., Heidlebaugh, A. R., Holdren, K., Walsh, L. K., Oetjens, M. T., Ledbetter, D. H., & Martin, C. L. (2021). Population Genomic Screening for Genetic Etiologies of Neurodevelopmental/Psychiatric Disorders Demonstrates Personal Utility and Positive Participant Responses. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 11(5), 365. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050365