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Brief Title: Broadening the Reach, Impact, and Delivery of Genetic Services
Official Title: Broadening the Reach, Impact, and Delivery of Genetic Services
Study ID: NCT03985852
Brief Summary: The purpose of this study is to compare the uptake of genetic testing among patients randomized with two different models of genetic services delivery (a patient-directed model and an enhanced standard of care model) and examine whether the impact on uptake differs by race/ethnicity and rurality. This study will also compare the effect of these delivery models on adherence to cancer prevention and screening recommendations and other patient responses.
Detailed Description: Patient Screening: A comprehensive screening algorithm will identify patients with family history data in various sections of the electronic health record (EHR) who meet current genetic testing criteria. Randomization to study arm (Enhanced Standard of Care or Patient-Directed Standard of Care) will be at the level of the primary care clinic. Enhanced Standard of Care Patients will be offered the opportunity to schedule a pre-test genetic counseling visit. Pre-test counseling includes review of the family history, risk assessment, discussion of the purpose of genetic testing and possible outcomes, implications for insurance coverage, costs, and assessment of psychosocial needs. Patients can opt to proceed with genetic testing during this session. All test results are returned by a genetic counselor by phone or in person based on the patient preference. A copy of the results and a letter with tailored screening recommendations are returned to the primary care provider and patient via the patient portal or mail. Patient-Directed Standard of Care The pre-test genetic counseling visit will be conducted through access to an automated genetics education assistant accessed through the patient portal of the electronic health record. The automated approach will address all the components of the pre-test counseling and contains content designed by the genetic counselors at the University of Utah and NYU (New York University). Patients will have the option to contact genetic counselors through the patient portal, by phone, or in person but this will not be required. All results will be reviewed by a genetic counselor. Negative results will be returned by the automated genetics education assistant. Genetic counselors will return results for pathogenic variants and variants of uncertain significance via phone. A copy of the results and a letter with tailored screening recommendations will be provided to the patient and primary care provider via the patient portal. All patients will be offered the option to schedule follow-up appointments in the genetics clinics. Genetic Testing: Genetic testing will be performed by Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act (CLIA)- certified, commercial laboratories based on standard clinical practice. Genetic testing will not be required to participate in the research questionnaires. Research Procedures: Two follow-up questionnaires will be sent via the patient portal following interaction with genetic counseling: i. Questionnaire #1: For participant who chose to receive genetic testing, a questionnaire will be sent approximately 4 weeks after their genetic results are returned. Through this questionnaire investigators will assess cognitive (i.e., recall, comprehension, uncertainty, risk perceptions), affective (i.e., test-related distress, positive reactions, decision regret), communication responses (i.e., family, provider), experience with genetic counseling, and sociodemographic characteristics. For those who chose not to test, a questionnaire will be sent approximately 4 weeks after last genetic service contact. In this questionnaire investigators will assess experience with genetic counseling, reason for not testing, decision regret, risk perceptions, and sociodemographic characteristics including numeracy. ii. Questionnaire #2: A questionnaire will be administered approximately 12 months after last genetic services contact. For those who chose to test, this questionnaire will ask about discussion of their test results with their primary care provider, family members, or others, and self-reported use of cancer screenings. For those who decide not to receive genetic testing, investigators will assess the self-reported use of cancer screenings, whether genetic testing was pursued at another time or through another source, communication with family members, and whether other relatives had received testing. For any participants who would like to complete questionnaires by telephone, a genetic counseling assistant or research coordinator will administer the questionnaire. Calls will be digitally recorded to allow for analysis of comprehension. Each questionnaire will take about 15 minutes to complete. Participants may also complete the questionnaires by mail if they choose. In addition to the questionnaires, investigators will examine screenings, care or health procedures related to genetic services recorded in the electronic health record to determine if an impact is made because of participation in genetic services.
Minimum Age: 25 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York, United States
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Name: Kimberly Kaphingst, PhD
Affiliation: University of Utah
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR