The acceptability of blood spot screening and genome sequencing in newborn screening: a systematic review examining evidence and frameworks.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Duncan Chambers, Susan Baxter, Anastasios Bastounis, Katherine Jones, Burak Kundakci, Anna Cantrell, Andrew Booth
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Population-wide newborn blood spot screening programmes are a successful public health intervention used to detect whether the baby is at risk of certain rare conditions, with the aim of earlier diagnosis and provision of optimal care and treatment. Evaluating candidate conditions to include in newborn blood spot and genetic sequencing raises questions regarding acceptability to parents/carers.

Methods: In the context of the possible expansion of the newborn blood spot screening programme in the United Kingdom, this review aimed to systematically review research on the acceptability to parents of newborn blood spot screening and genetic sequencing. A protocol was developed prior to commencing the review and was registered on the PROSPERO database. A team of researchers carried out the review, with checking at all stages carried out by at least two individuals. We included research published after 2013 with participants who were pregnant or a recent parent of a newborn and were resident in a high-income country. We included quantitative and qualitative studies that investigated the acceptability to parents/carers of newborn blood spot screening or genetic sequencing. Quantitative studies were narratively synthesised, and theories/frameworks identified and evaluated. Qualitative studies were analysed for recurring themes, and a meta-synthesis was carried out to compare and contrast these two types of data. We quality appraised included articles using tools appropriate for their study design.

Results: Searches were carried out in September to November 2023 and screening identified 25 relevant research articles. Just over half were from North America, with four existing reviews and nine qualitative studies. Domains of acceptability described in the literature were: support for screening; level of anxiety, information and knowledge; consent; views of the procedure; and support after screening. The research indicated consensus support for blood spot screening, and for expanding to some other conditions, although some parental anxiety was reported. Parents/carers mostly perceived that they had received sufficient information, but the timing of this could be improved. While parents indicated interest in genomic screening, studies highlighted the need for clearer consent procedures and greater support for parents following genomic screening than for blood spot screening. Only three included studies reported using any kind of theoretical framework.

Discussion: Most parents/carers found newborn blood spot screening programmes to be acceptable and favoured their large-scale implementation. A minority of parents/carers expressed concerns regarding the acceptability of processes underpinning newborn blood spot screening, such as consent, the timing of receiving information and support available after testing. More research is needed regarding the acceptability of newborn genomic sequencing screening programmes, which are less established compared with newborn blood spot screening programmes.

Limitations: The over-representation of studies conducted in the United States has implications for the applicability of findings to other countries where testing is not typically mandatory and health systems differ considerably. Most studies were of cross-sectional design and there was limited representation of people from lower incomes and non-white ethnicity. While the inclusion of studies only in populations of future or very recent parents provided coherence to the findings, unclear reporting of participants may have resulted in under- or overinclusion of some studies.

Funding: This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number NIHR159927.

血斑筛查和基因组测序在新生儿筛查中的可接受性:一项检查证据和框架的系统综述。
背景:全民新生儿血斑筛查计划是一项成功的公共卫生干预措施,用于检测婴儿是否有某些罕见疾病的风险,目的是早期诊断和提供最佳护理和治疗。评估候选条件包括新生儿血斑和基因测序提出了关于父母/照顾者可接受性的问题。方法:在英国可能扩大新生儿血斑筛查计划的背景下,本综述旨在系统地回顾新生儿血斑筛查和基因测序对父母的可接受性的研究。在开始审查之前制定了一项协议,并在普洛斯彼罗数据库中登记。一组研究人员进行了审查,至少有两个人在各个阶段进行了检查。我们纳入了2013年以后发表的研究,研究对象是居住在高收入国家的孕妇或刚生完孩子的父母。我们纳入了定量和定性研究,调查了父母/照顾者对新生儿血斑筛查或基因测序的接受程度。定量研究被叙述地综合起来,理论/框架被识别和评估。定性研究对反复出现的主题进行了分析,并进行了元综合来比较和对比这两种类型的数据。我们使用适合其研究设计的工具对纳入的文章进行质量评价。结果:检索于2023年9月至11月进行,筛选出25篇相关研究文章。超过一半的研究来自北美,有4个现有的评论和9个定性研究。文献中描述的可接受性领域是:支持筛选;焦虑、信息和知识水平;同意;对程序的意见;筛选后的支持。该研究表明,尽管有一些父母感到焦虑,但人们普遍支持血斑筛查,并将其扩展到其他一些疾病。家长/照顾者大多认为他们已经获得了足够的信息,但时间可以改进。虽然家长们表示对基因组筛查感兴趣,但研究强调,与血液斑点筛查相比,基因组筛查需要更明确的同意程序和对父母的更大支持。只有三个纳入了使用任何理论框架的研究。讨论:大多数家长/照顾者认为新生儿血斑筛查方案是可以接受的,并赞成大规模实施。少数父母/照顾者对支持新生儿血斑筛查的程序的可接受性表示关切,例如同意、接受信息的时间和检测后可获得的支持。需要对新生儿基因组测序筛查规划的可接受性进行更多的研究,与新生儿血斑筛查规划相比,这些筛查规划尚不完善。局限性:在美国进行的研究的过度代表性影响了研究结果在其他国家的适用性,这些国家通常不是强制性的检测,卫生系统差异很大。大多数研究都是横断面设计,低收入和非白种人的代表性有限。虽然只纳入未来或最近的父母群体的研究提供了研究结果的一致性,但参与者的不明确报告可能导致一些研究的不足或过度纳入。资助:本文介绍了由国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助的独立研究,奖励号为NIHR159927。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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