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How Primary Care Providers Talk to Patients about Genome Sequencing Results: Risk, Rationale, and Recommendation.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Vassy, JL; Davis, JK; Kirby, C; Richardson, IJ; Green, RC; McGuire, AL; Ubel, PA
Published in: Journal of general internal medicine
June 2018

Genomics will play an increasingly prominent role in clinical medicine.To describe how primary care physicians (PCPs) discuss and make clinical recommendations about genome sequencing results.Qualitative analysis.PCPs and their generally healthy patients undergoing genome sequencing.Patients received clinical genome reports that included four categories of results: monogenic disease risk variants (if present), carrier status, five pharmacogenetics results, and polygenic risk estimates for eight cardiometabolic traits. Patients' office visits with their PCPs were audio-recorded, and summative content analysis was used to describe how PCPs discussed genomic results.For each genomic result discussed in 48 PCP-patient visits, we identified a "take-home" message (recommendation), categorized as continuing current management, further treatment, further evaluation, behavior change, remembering for future care, or sharing with family members. We analyzed how PCPs came to each recommendation by identifying 1) how they described the risk or importance of the given result and 2) the rationale they gave for translating that risk into a specific recommendation. Quantitative analysis showed that continuing current management was the most commonly coded recommendation across results overall (492/749, 66%) and for each individual result type except monogenic disease risk results. Pharmacogenetics was the most common result type to prompt a recommendation to remember for future care (94/119, 79%); carrier status was the most common type prompting a recommendation to share with family members (45/54, 83%); and polygenic results were the most common type prompting a behavior change recommendation (55/58, 95%). One-fifth of recommendation codes associated with monogenic results were for further evaluation (6/24, 25%). Rationales for these recommendations included patient context, family context, and scientific/clinical limitations of sequencing.PCPs distinguish substantive differences among categories of genome sequencing results and use clinical judgment to justify continuing current management in generally healthy patients with genomic results.

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Published In

Journal of general internal medicine

DOI

EISSN

1525-1497

ISSN

0884-8734

Publication Date

June 2018

Volume

33

Issue

6

Start / End Page

877 / 885

Related Subject Headings

  • Risk Factors
  • Primary Health Care
  • Pilot Projects
  • Physicians, Primary Care
  • Physician-Patient Relations
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Genetic Testing
  • General & Internal Medicine
  • Female
 

Citation

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Chicago
ICMJE
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Vassy, J. L., Davis, J. K., Kirby, C., Richardson, I. J., Green, R. C., McGuire, A. L., & Ubel, P. A. (2018). How Primary Care Providers Talk to Patients about Genome Sequencing Results: Risk, Rationale, and Recommendation. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 33(6), 877–885. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-017-4295-4
Vassy, Jason L., J Kelly Davis, Christine Kirby, Ian J. Richardson, Robert C. Green, Amy L. McGuire, and Peter A. Ubel. “How Primary Care Providers Talk to Patients about Genome Sequencing Results: Risk, Rationale, and Recommendation.Journal of General Internal Medicine 33, no. 6 (June 2018): 877–85. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-017-4295-4.
Vassy JL, Davis JK, Kirby C, Richardson IJ, Green RC, McGuire AL, et al. How Primary Care Providers Talk to Patients about Genome Sequencing Results: Risk, Rationale, and Recommendation. Journal of general internal medicine. 2018 Jun;33(6):877–85.
Vassy, Jason L., et al. “How Primary Care Providers Talk to Patients about Genome Sequencing Results: Risk, Rationale, and Recommendation.Journal of General Internal Medicine, vol. 33, no. 6, June 2018, pp. 877–85. Epmc, doi:10.1007/s11606-017-4295-4.
Vassy JL, Davis JK, Kirby C, Richardson IJ, Green RC, McGuire AL, Ubel PA. How Primary Care Providers Talk to Patients about Genome Sequencing Results: Risk, Rationale, and Recommendation. Journal of general internal medicine. 2018 Jun;33(6):877–885.
Journal cover image

Published In

Journal of general internal medicine

DOI

EISSN

1525-1497

ISSN

0884-8734

Publication Date

June 2018

Volume

33

Issue

6

Start / End Page

877 / 885

Related Subject Headings

  • Risk Factors
  • Primary Health Care
  • Pilot Projects
  • Physicians, Primary Care
  • Physician-Patient Relations
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Genetic Testing
  • General & Internal Medicine
  • Female