Parent-Reported Clinical Utility of Pediatric Genomic Sequencing
- PMID: 37470118
- PMCID: PMC10812387
- DOI: 10.1542/peds.2022-060318
Parent-Reported Clinical Utility of Pediatric Genomic Sequencing
Abstract
Background and objectives: Genomic sequencing (GS) is increasingly used for diagnostic evaluation, yet follow-up care is not well understood. We assessed clinicians' recommendations after GS, parent-reported follow-up, and actions parents initiated in response to learning their child's GS results.
Methods: We surveyed parents of children who received GS through the Clinical Sequencing Evidence Generating Research consortium ∼5 to 7 months after return of results. We compared the proportion of parents who reported discussing their child's result with a clinician, clinicians' recommendations, and parents' follow-up actions by GS result type using χ2 tests.
Results: A total of 1188 respondents completed survey measures on recommended medical actions (n = 1187) and/or parent-initiated actions (n = 913). Most parents who completed recommended medical actions questions (n = 833, 70.3%) reported having discussed their child's GS results with clinicians. Clinicians made recommendations to change current care for patients with positive GS results (n = 79, 39.1%) more frequently than for those with inconclusive (n = 31, 12.4%) or negative results (n = 44, 11.9%; P < .001). Many parents discussed (n = 152 completed, n = 135 planned) implications of GS results for future pregnancies with a clinician. Aside from clinical recommendations, 13.0% (n = 119) of parents initiated changes to their child's health or lifestyle.
Conclusions: In diverse pediatric clinical contexts, GS results can lead to recommendations for follow-up care, but they likely do not prompt large increases in the quantity of care received.
Copyright © 2023 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Conflict of interest statement
Comment in
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Integrating Genomics Into Pediatric Health Care: The Long Road Ahead.Pediatrics. 2023 Aug 1;152(2):e2023061616. doi: 10.1542/peds.2023-061616. Pediatrics. 2023. PMID: 37470117 No abstract available.
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