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Returning Individual-Level Urgent or Emergent Research Results to Participants: The Project Baseline Health Study Experience.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Pagidipati, N; Heidenfelder, B; Kwee, LC; Rodriguez, F; Chatterjee, R; Parikh, KS; Khouri, MG; Stiller, J; Eckstrand, J; Marcom, PK; Mettu, PS ...
Published in: Am J Med Open
June 2025

BACKGROUND: Returning results to research participants is increasingly recognized as an ethical mandate, yet little is known about best practices to optimally communicate urgent or emergent results. METHODS: We describe the development of and experience with a process to return results to participants in the Project Baseline Health Study (PBHS), which was a prospective observational cohort study of 2502 participants enrolled from 2017 to 2019 and followed through 2023. Urgent or emergent results were returned during or after the baseline visit from vital signs; clinical laboratory testing; and ocular, cardiovascular, and pulmonary imaging. RESULTS: Among 2002 participants in this analysis, 39.7% had at least one urgent or emergent finding returned, representing a total of 1159 results returned over 3 years. The most commonly returned results were eye findings (n = 246), pulmonary nodules (n = 159), abnormal stress echocardiograms (n = 123), abnormal rest electrocardiograms (bradycardia) (n = 74), and lung parenchyma findings (n = 55). Participants with urgent or emergent incidental findings were older (mean [SD] 58.0 [16.2] years vs 48.0 [16.6] years) with a greater burden of cardiovascular, metabolic, or cancer comorbidities than those without urgent or emergent incidental findings. CONCLUSIONS: This report from the PBHS study is one of the first to describe a process to systematically return urgent or emergent results to research participants. This process led to the successful return of clinically important results to participants but also required significant time and effort from study clinicians and staff.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Am J Med Open

DOI

EISSN

2667-0364

Publication Date

June 2025

Volume

13

Start / End Page

100092

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Pagidipati, N., Heidenfelder, B., Kwee, L. C., Rodriguez, F., Chatterjee, R., Parikh, K. S., … Project Baseline Health Study Group. (2025). Returning Individual-Level Urgent or Emergent Research Results to Participants: The Project Baseline Health Study Experience. Am J Med Open, 13, 100092. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajmo.2025.100092
Pagidipati, Neha, Brooke Heidenfelder, Lydia Coulter Kwee, Fatima Rodriguez, Ranee Chatterjee, Kishan S. Parikh, Michel G. Khouri, et al. “Returning Individual-Level Urgent or Emergent Research Results to Participants: The Project Baseline Health Study Experience.Am J Med Open 13 (June 2025): 100092. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajmo.2025.100092.
Pagidipati N, Heidenfelder B, Kwee LC, Rodriguez F, Chatterjee R, Parikh KS, et al. Returning Individual-Level Urgent or Emergent Research Results to Participants: The Project Baseline Health Study Experience. Am J Med Open. 2025 Jun;13:100092.
Pagidipati, Neha, et al. “Returning Individual-Level Urgent or Emergent Research Results to Participants: The Project Baseline Health Study Experience.Am J Med Open, vol. 13, June 2025, p. 100092. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.ajmo.2025.100092.
Pagidipati N, Heidenfelder B, Kwee LC, Rodriguez F, Chatterjee R, Parikh KS, Khouri MG, Stiller J, Eckstrand J, Marcom PK, Mettu PS, Jaffe GJ, Shashidhar S, Swope S, Spielman S, Fraulo E, Newby LK, Douglas P, Wong C, Green R, Shore S, Mega J, Hernandez A, Campbell P, Mahaffey KW, Shah SH, Project Baseline Health Study Group. Returning Individual-Level Urgent or Emergent Research Results to Participants: The Project Baseline Health Study Experience. Am J Med Open. 2025 Jun;13:100092.

Published In

Am J Med Open

DOI

EISSN

2667-0364

Publication Date

June 2025

Volume

13

Start / End Page

100092

Location

United States