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Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants

The consequences of returning infectious pathogen test results identified incidentally in research studies have not been well-studied. Concerns include identification of an important health issue for individuals, accuracy of research test results, public health impact, potential emotional distress f...

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Autores principales: Silverman, Edwin K., Kim, Arthur Y., Make, Barry J., Regan, Elizabeth A., Morrow, Jarrett D., Hersh, Craig P., O’Brien, James, Crapo, James D., Hansel, Nadia N., Criner, Gerard, Flenaugh, Eric L., Conrad, Douglas, Casaburi, Richard, Bowler, Russell P., Hanania, Nicola A., Barr, R. Graham, Bhatt, Surya P., Sciurba, Frank C., Anzueto, Antonio, Han, MeiLan K., McEvoy, Charlene E., Comellas, Alejandro P., DeMeo, Dawn L., Rosiello, Richard, Curtis, Jeffrey L., Uchida, Tricia, Wilson, Carla, O’Rourke, P. Pearl
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10616181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37903807
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41525-023-00379-4
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author Silverman, Edwin K.
Kim, Arthur Y.
Make, Barry J.
Regan, Elizabeth A.
Morrow, Jarrett D.
Hersh, Craig P.
O’Brien, James
Crapo, James D.
Hansel, Nadia N.
Criner, Gerard
Flenaugh, Eric L.
Conrad, Douglas
Casaburi, Richard
Bowler, Russell P.
Hanania, Nicola A.
Barr, R. Graham
Bhatt, Surya P.
Sciurba, Frank C.
Anzueto, Antonio
Han, MeiLan K.
McEvoy, Charlene E.
Comellas, Alejandro P.
DeMeo, Dawn L.
Rosiello, Richard
Curtis, Jeffrey L.
Uchida, Tricia
Wilson, Carla
O’Rourke, P. Pearl
author_facet Silverman, Edwin K.
Kim, Arthur Y.
Make, Barry J.
Regan, Elizabeth A.
Morrow, Jarrett D.
Hersh, Craig P.
O’Brien, James
Crapo, James D.
Hansel, Nadia N.
Criner, Gerard
Flenaugh, Eric L.
Conrad, Douglas
Casaburi, Richard
Bowler, Russell P.
Hanania, Nicola A.
Barr, R. Graham
Bhatt, Surya P.
Sciurba, Frank C.
Anzueto, Antonio
Han, MeiLan K.
McEvoy, Charlene E.
Comellas, Alejandro P.
DeMeo, Dawn L.
Rosiello, Richard
Curtis, Jeffrey L.
Uchida, Tricia
Wilson, Carla
O’Rourke, P. Pearl
author_sort Silverman, Edwin K.
collection PubMed
description The consequences of returning infectious pathogen test results identified incidentally in research studies have not been well-studied. Concerns include identification of an important health issue for individuals, accuracy of research test results, public health impact, potential emotional distress for participants, and need for IRB permissions. Blood RNA-sequencing analysis for non-human RNA in 3984 participants from the COPDGene study identified 228 participants with evidence suggestive for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. We hypothesized that incidentally discovered HCV results could be effectively returned to COPDGene participants with attention to the identified concerns. In conjunction with a COPDGene Participant Advisory Panel, we developed and obtained IRB approval for a process of returning HCV research results and an HCV Follow-Up Study questionnaire to capture information about previous HCV diagnosis and treatment information and participant reactions to return of HCV results. During phone calls following the initial HCV notification letter, 84 of 124 participants who could be contacted (67.7%) volunteered that they had been previously diagnosed with HCV infection. Thirty-one of these 124 COPDGene participants were enrolled in the HCV Follow-Up Study. Five of the 31 HCV Follow-Up Study participants did not report a previous diagnosis of HCV. For four of these participants, subsequent clinical HCV testing confirmed HCV infection. Thus, 30/31 Follow-Up Study participants had confirmed HCV diagnoses, supporting the accuracy of the HCV research test results. However, the limited number of participants in the Follow-Up Study precludes an accurate assessment of the false-positive and false-negative rates of the research RNA sequencing evidence for HCV. Most HCV Follow-Up Study participants (29/31) were supportive of returning HCV research results, and most participants found the process for returning HCV results to be informative and not upsetting. Newly diagnosed participants were more likely to be pleased to learn about a potentially curable infection (p = 0.027) and showed a trend toward being more frightened by the potential health risks of HCV (p = 0.11). We conclude that HCV results identified incidentally during transcriptomic research studies can be successfully returned to research study participants with a carefully designed process.
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spelling pubmed-106161812023-11-01 Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants Silverman, Edwin K. Kim, Arthur Y. Make, Barry J. Regan, Elizabeth A. Morrow, Jarrett D. Hersh, Craig P. O’Brien, James Crapo, James D. Hansel, Nadia N. Criner, Gerard Flenaugh, Eric L. Conrad, Douglas Casaburi, Richard Bowler, Russell P. Hanania, Nicola A. Barr, R. Graham Bhatt, Surya P. Sciurba, Frank C. Anzueto, Antonio Han, MeiLan K. McEvoy, Charlene E. Comellas, Alejandro P. DeMeo, Dawn L. Rosiello, Richard Curtis, Jeffrey L. Uchida, Tricia Wilson, Carla O’Rourke, P. Pearl NPJ Genom Med Article The consequences of returning infectious pathogen test results identified incidentally in research studies have not been well-studied. Concerns include identification of an important health issue for individuals, accuracy of research test results, public health impact, potential emotional distress for participants, and need for IRB permissions. Blood RNA-sequencing analysis for non-human RNA in 3984 participants from the COPDGene study identified 228 participants with evidence suggestive for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. We hypothesized that incidentally discovered HCV results could be effectively returned to COPDGene participants with attention to the identified concerns. In conjunction with a COPDGene Participant Advisory Panel, we developed and obtained IRB approval for a process of returning HCV research results and an HCV Follow-Up Study questionnaire to capture information about previous HCV diagnosis and treatment information and participant reactions to return of HCV results. During phone calls following the initial HCV notification letter, 84 of 124 participants who could be contacted (67.7%) volunteered that they had been previously diagnosed with HCV infection. Thirty-one of these 124 COPDGene participants were enrolled in the HCV Follow-Up Study. Five of the 31 HCV Follow-Up Study participants did not report a previous diagnosis of HCV. For four of these participants, subsequent clinical HCV testing confirmed HCV infection. Thus, 30/31 Follow-Up Study participants had confirmed HCV diagnoses, supporting the accuracy of the HCV research test results. However, the limited number of participants in the Follow-Up Study precludes an accurate assessment of the false-positive and false-negative rates of the research RNA sequencing evidence for HCV. Most HCV Follow-Up Study participants (29/31) were supportive of returning HCV research results, and most participants found the process for returning HCV results to be informative and not upsetting. Newly diagnosed participants were more likely to be pleased to learn about a potentially curable infection (p = 0.027) and showed a trend toward being more frightened by the potential health risks of HCV (p = 0.11). We conclude that HCV results identified incidentally during transcriptomic research studies can be successfully returned to research study participants with a carefully designed process. Nature Publishing Group UK 2023-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10616181/ /pubmed/37903807 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41525-023-00379-4 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Article
Silverman, Edwin K.
Kim, Arthur Y.
Make, Barry J.
Regan, Elizabeth A.
Morrow, Jarrett D.
Hersh, Craig P.
O’Brien, James
Crapo, James D.
Hansel, Nadia N.
Criner, Gerard
Flenaugh, Eric L.
Conrad, Douglas
Casaburi, Richard
Bowler, Russell P.
Hanania, Nicola A.
Barr, R. Graham
Bhatt, Surya P.
Sciurba, Frank C.
Anzueto, Antonio
Han, MeiLan K.
McEvoy, Charlene E.
Comellas, Alejandro P.
DeMeo, Dawn L.
Rosiello, Richard
Curtis, Jeffrey L.
Uchida, Tricia
Wilson, Carla
O’Rourke, P. Pearl
Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants
title Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants
title_full Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants
title_fullStr Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants
title_full_unstemmed Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants
title_short Returning incidentally discovered Hepatitis C RNA-seq results to COPDGene study participants
title_sort returning incidentally discovered hepatitis c rna-seq results to copdgene study participants
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10616181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37903807
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41525-023-00379-4
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