Clinicians’ Views and Experiences with Offering and Returning Results from Exome Sequencing to Parents of Infants with Hearing Loss
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Clinicians’ Experiences with Offering Exome Sequencing for Hearing Loss
3.2.1. Clinicians’ Views on Offering Exome Sequencing for Hearing Loss
“The diagnosis of certain genetic syndromes will lead you down a different treatment pathway and allow you to avoid other investigations.”(Clinician 1)
“I think definitely the hearing component, everybody should be offered, or given the chance to take it up … even the unilateral losses and the mild losses which are not part of eligibility … I think they should also be offered the same testing because it’s just being equitable, they also deserve to have an answer, if there is one.”(Clinician 2)
“It’s difficult with deafness, because deafness alone, we think of deafhood and people that are deaf live a great, long, healthy life. And there’s a bit of an ethical discussion to be had for testing newborn babies that are found to have hearing loss … to an extent you’re really pathologising this condition they have … these parents are making decisions for them and their genetic information is going to be stored indefinitely… when maybe there was no real indication for doing the test in the first place.”(Clinician 8)
“My main ethical challenge with this project is that it’s come to an end, and now we have lots of families coming to our clinic, and being referred, expecting this level of testing… this was a temporary solution, which was great, but now it’s stopped, we’re back to square one with a lot of these families and there’s a lot of deaf babies born every year and now I just have to sit there and say ‘it’s (AUD) 3000 dollars and we have no means of funding it whatsoever’ … So it’s a question of distributive justice that I am bothered by a lot.”(Clinician 4)
“There will be keen families, and they’ve got the psychological and coping resource to deal with everything at the same time. And they could come through early.”(Clinician 10)
“It was pretty clear that for some parents it was a bit early to be raising this. And so, if I was doing this more broadly, I would say maybe not to bring in the genetics and the genetic question ‘til six months of age or nine months or something like that. ‘Cause it did seem that in this cohort, keeping in mind they’ve just been diagnosed with deafness, so they were coping with that diagnosis, then to be faced with this offer of more stuff, I think it was probably a bit overwhelming for some people… I would say maybe we’ll just try and get these kids at six months, for example, rather than as early as possible.”(Clinician 1)
“That feeling of, you know, are we bombarding the families with so much, at that particular point in their sort of understanding of what’s happening to their kids? So, I think people (study clinicians) felt a bit uncomfortable about that, that it was all happening at the wrong time … not the genetic testing for the cause for the deafness, but the offer, and the idea that they were being invited for two or three projects … simultaneously at a point when they’re still coming to grips with the diagnosis in the child.”(Clinician 10)
“Parents should have the option to opt in at any time to have it done, when they’re ready or when they have thought enough about it. ‘Cause there are huge implications once you’ve taken the test, in terms of knowing the result.”(Clinician 2)
3.2.2. Parents’ Reasons for and against Project Participation
“They want to know the answer because they want an explanation, or they want treatment.”(Clinician 11)
“… there’s a lot of information out there on the internet and within the groups as well … ‘now that we’ve found this one thing, could it be that there are other things that are going to be going on?’ And I think that for a lot of parents, they’re quite scared of conditions like Usher syndrome and those sorts of things, so I think that was a big motivation for a lot of parents to have the testing for hearing loss.”(Clinician 9)
“Parents might feel guilty about something that’s happened in pregnancy… a genetic diagnosis for them would help take away that kind of guilt.”(Clinician 3)
“Not necessarily that they would do anything to prevent a pregnancy or terminate a pregnancy based on the result, but just so they had an idea of ‘is this likely to be a one-off thing? Could I have another child with this same hearing loss? Will it be a similar type?’ Just to know for that kind of family planning … a lot of families described finding out about the diagnosis as just such an earth-shattering shock to their system… I think they wanted to maybe be a bit more prepared if it happened again.”(Clinician 9)
“They’re having more children and they wish to avoid having a child with hearing loss.”(Clinician 10)
“I just remember them saying, ‘I don’t mind whether my baby’s hearing loss is because of a genetic change or not, it’s not going to change anything for us or our family.’”(Clinician 6)
“There’s so much support, programs, intervention related to hearing loss that the families just felt run off their feet and overwhelmed by all the services … they were like, ‘I can’t introduce another health service into the picture.’”(Clinician 11)
“I think at the moment I’d just say it’s a mixture of different factors, which range from they may already have a genetic diagnosis, they may have decided the condition’s not genetic. They may just not want to be involved in research, or be concerned about insurance or other implications. So we’ve got a list, but there’s no sort of single factor that’s repeating, it’s basically a whole lot of different things.”(Clinician 1)
3.2.3. Return of Exome Sequencing Results
“Usually the time between consent and results’ return was a number of months. So often when we were calling families to arrange a result appointment, you’d have to kind of re-introduce yourself and go ‘remember me? We talked about this test, the reason that I’m calling is we’re expecting to have some results for you in the next couple of weeks’. But I think a lot of the time you were kind of reminding families what exactly it was you were calling about ... I guess the sense of urgency (around the time of the diagnosis) was usually off by that stage.”(Clinician 6)
“One thing we’ve found is that there seems to be … lots of variants (of uncertain significance) in hearing loss genes. So, it’s quite common to get a report with three or four variants of unknown significance. Or even one that we’re quite confident is the diagnosis and some variants of unknown significance. And I found that very challenging for some families, to explain a genetic finding and then explain other genetic findings that may be less relevant.”(Clinician 3)
“For the deafness results, I’ve been surprised at how many families have been really emotionally affected by giving them a deafness result … quite a few families are really ecstatic to have an answer, which I think maybe we didn’t predict at the start because it often doesn’t affect management or treatment that much … just really relieved to have an answer to explain what’s going on…that sense of, yeah, relief I guess is the best way to describe it. So that stood out.”(Clinician 3)
“…often people blame themselves for problems in their children, so finding a genetic diagnosis brings a relief to some families that it’s not something that they did during the pregnancy, particularly when people are worried about an infection or something like that, that’s playing on their mind.”(Clinician 4)
“Relief was a big one. Just being grateful that they have an answer, that it doesn’t mean anything else is going to necessarily go wrong.”(Clinician 9)
“A subsample … were expecting it to come back genetic, but when it did it kind of just confirmed like ‘oh, it’s something that’s genetic.’ And I think maybe, like there’s still a stigma around genetic conditions and having something different with you. So, I think for some of them they may have been a bit taken aback, like ‘oh ok, it means there’s a 25% chance it could happen again if it was a recessive cause … not that I’d terminate a pregnancy based on it, but now I’m in a bit of a conflict of, there’s a chance I could have another child with a hearing loss’.”(Clinician 9)
“Humans are unpredictable (laughs). So, you think someone might be very happy that they’ve received an answer because it’s confirmed that it’s isolated hearing loss. The parent absolutely knew the child has hearing loss, and that, yep, they have the answer, they want to use it for reproductive choices, it’s ticking all those boxes for them. But in actual fact maybe they had somewhere in the back of their mind that they hoped it wasn’t really hearing loss and it was something the child will grow out of, and now you’ve just given them this in-writing thing that says ‘no, you’re child definitely has this’. And so for them it’s devastating.”(Clinician 5)
“For the syndromic forms of hearing loss … for some families they found it as a helpful explanation for things and appreciated that there could be other screening or other testing that could be done for their child, and were grateful that this was also picked up early… like ‘we found out they could have a heart condition, so we’re going to send them to have their heart looked at as well. It’s something we wouldn’t necessarily have done’ or ‘their kidneys looked at’. So, I think there was value in that for quite a lot of families.”(Clinician 9)
“I was personally involved with a family who received a diagnosis of Usher syndrome, and that was just absolutely heartbreaking for them. It was their biggest fear, and it eventuated. So, yeah. It was utterly devastating for them.”(Clinician 9)
“As much as we didn’t find a diagnosis at all, a lot of families were relieved that we didn’t find a syndromic diagnosis or something like that.”(Clinician 6)
“…some families were quite disappointed if they didn’t get an answer, particularly if they were hoping to understand if their child needed any other check-ups moving forward other than just getting their hearing checked every now and again, or some families were keen to use that information in a reproductive setting for future pregnancies.”(Clinician 6)
“People are interested in the possibility of re-analysis down the track, so most people expressed an interest in that when we brought it up as a possibility.”(Clinician 4)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Downie, L.; Halliday, J.L.; Burt, R.A.; Lunke, S.; Lynch, E.; Martyn, M.; Poulakis, Z.; Gaff, C.; Sung, V.; Wake, M.; et al. A protocol for whole-exome sequencing in newborns with congenital deafness: A prospective population-based cohort. BMJ Paediatr. Open 2017, 1, e000119. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Downie, L.; Halliday, J.; Burt, R.; Lunke, S.; Lynch, E.; Martyn, M.; Poulakis, Z.; Gaff, C.; Sung, V.; Wake, M.; et al. Exome sequencing in infants with congenital hearing impairment: A population-based cohort study. Eur. J. Hum. Genet. EJHG 2020, 28, 587–596. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Taylor, N.; Best, S.; Martyn, M.; Long, J.C.; North, K.N.; Braithwaite, J.; Gaff, C. A transformative translational change programme to introduce genomics into healthcare: A complexity and implementation science study protocol. BMJ Open 2019, 9, e024681. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Gaff, C.L.; MWinship, I.M.; Forrest, S.P.; Hansen, D.; Clark, J.M.; Waring, P.; South, M.; Sinclair, A. Preparing for genomic medicine: A real world demonstration of health system change. NPJ Genom. Med. 2017, 2, 16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Downie, L.; Halliday, J.; Lewis, S.; Lunke, S.; Lynch, E.; Martyn, M.; Gaff, C.; Jarmolowicz, A.; Amor, D.J. Exome sequencing in newborns with congenital deafness as a model for genomic newborn screening: The Baby Beyond Hearing project. Genet. Med. 2020, 22, 937–944. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Sanderson, S.C.; Hill, M.; Patch, C.; Searle, B.; Lewis, C.; Chitty, L.S. Delivering genome sequencing in clinical practice: An interview study with healthcare professionals involved in the 100 000 Genomes Project. BMJ Open 2019, 9, e029699. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Wynn, J.; Lewis, K.; Amendola, L.M.; Bernhardt, B.A.; Biswas, S.; Joshi, M.; McMullen, C.; Scollon, S. Clinical providers’ experiences with returning results from genomic sequencing: An interview study. BMC Med. Genom. 2018, 11, 45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Vears, D.F.; Sénécal, K.; Borry, P. Genetic health professionals’ experiences returning results from diagnostic genomic sequencing to patients. J. Genet. Couns. 2020, 29, 807–815. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Marshall, M.N. Sampling for qualitative research. Fam. Pract. 1996, 13, 522–525. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Mason, J. Sampling and selection in qualitative research. In Qualitative Researching, 2nd ed.; Mason, J., Ed.; Sage: London, UK, 2002. [Google Scholar]
- Hsieh, H.F.; Shannon, S.E. Three approaches to qualitative content analysis. Qual. Health Res. 2005, 15, 1277–1288. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Morse, J.M.; Field, P.A. Principles of data analysis. In Qualitative Research Methods for Health Professionals; Morse, J.M., Field, P.A., Eds.; Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 1995. [Google Scholar]
- Downie, L.; Amor, D.J.; Halliday, J.; Lewis, S.; Martyn, M.; Goranitis, I. Exome Sequencing for Isolated Congenital Hearing Loss: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis. Laryngoscope 2021, 131, E2371–E2377. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Notini, L.; Earp, B.D.; Gillam, L.; McDougall, R.J.; Savulescu, J.; Telfer, M.; Pang, K.C. Forever young? The ethics of ongoing puberty suppression for non-binary adults. J. Med. Ethics 2020, 46, 743–752. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Notini, L.; Gaff, C.L.; Savulescu, J.; Vears, D.F. Clinicians’ Views and Experiences with Offering and Returning Results from Exome Sequencing to Parents of Infants with Hearing Loss. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 35. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11010035
Notini L, Gaff CL, Savulescu J, Vears DF. Clinicians’ Views and Experiences with Offering and Returning Results from Exome Sequencing to Parents of Infants with Hearing Loss. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(1):35. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11010035
Chicago/Turabian StyleNotini, Lauren, Clara L. Gaff, Julian Savulescu, and Danya F. Vears. 2022. "Clinicians’ Views and Experiences with Offering and Returning Results from Exome Sequencing to Parents of Infants with Hearing Loss" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 1: 35. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11010035
APA StyleNotini, L., Gaff, C. L., Savulescu, J., & Vears, D. F. (2022). Clinicians’ Views and Experiences with Offering and Returning Results from Exome Sequencing to Parents of Infants with Hearing Loss. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(1), 35. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11010035