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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Participatory Medicine

Date Submitted: Sep 13, 2017
Date Accepted: Sep 13, 2017
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Participant-Partners in Genetic Research: An Exome Study with Families of Children with Unexplained Medical Conditions

Katsanis SH, Minear MA, Sadeghpour A, Cope H, Perilla Y, Cook-Deegan R, Duke Task Force For Neonatal Genomics , Katsanis N, Davis EE, Angrist M

Participant-Partners in Genetic Research: An Exome Study with Families of Children with Unexplained Medical Conditions

J Particip Med 2018;10(1):e2

DOI: 10.2196/jopm.8958

PMID: 33052113

PMCID: 7489233

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Participant-Partners in Genetic Research: An Exome Study with Families of Children with Unexplained Medical Conditions

  • Sara Huston Katsanis; 
  • Mollie A Minear; 
  • Azita Sadeghpour; 
  • Heidi Cope; 
  • Yezmin Perilla; 
  • Robert Cook-Deegan; 
  • Duke Task Force For Neonatal Genomics; 
  • Nicholas Katsanis; 
  • Erica E Davis; 
  • Misha Angrist

Background:

Unlike aggregate research on groups of participants with a particular disorder, genomic research on discrete families’ rare conditions could result in data of use to families, their healthcare, as well as generating knowledge on the human genome.

Objective:

In a study of families seeking to rule in/out genetic causes for their children’s medical conditions via exome sequencing, we solicited their views on the importance of genomic information. Our aim was to learn the interests of parents in seeking genomic research data and to gauge their responsiveness and engagement with the research team.

Methods:

At enrollment, we offered participants options in the consent form for receiving potentially clinically relevant research results. We also offered an option of being a “partner” versus a “traditional” participant; partners could be re-contacted for research and study activities. We invited adult partners to complete a pre-exome survey, attend annual family forums, and participate in other inter-family interaction opportunities.

Results:

Of the 385 adults enrolled, 79% opted for “partnership” with the research team. Nearly all (99.2%) participants opted to receive research results pertaining to their children’s primary conditions. A majority indicated the desire to receive additional clinically relevant outside the scope of their children’s conditions (92.7%) and an interest in non-clinically relevant genetic information (82.7%).

Conclusions:

Most participants chose partnership, including its rights and potential burdens; however, active engagement in study activities remained the exception. Not surprisingly, the overwhelming majority of participants—both partners and traditional—expected to receive all genetic information resulting from the research study.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Katsanis SH, Minear MA, Sadeghpour A, Cope H, Perilla Y, Cook-Deegan R, Duke Task Force For Neonatal Genomics , Katsanis N, Davis EE, Angrist M

Participant-Partners in Genetic Research: An Exome Study with Families of Children with Unexplained Medical Conditions

J Particip Med 2018;10(1):e2

DOI: 10.2196/jopm.8958

PMID: 33052113

PMCID: 7489233

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.