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What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes

Current literature/guidelines regarding the most appropriate term to communicate a cancer-related disease-causing germline variant in childhood cancer lack consensus. Guidelines also rarely address preferences of patients/families. We aimed to assess preferences of parents of children with cancer, g...

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Autores principales: Hunter, Jacqueline D., Robertson, Eden G., Hetherington, Kate, Ziegler, David S., Marshall, Glenn M., Kirk, Judy, Marron, Jonathan M., Denburg, Avram E., Barlow-Stewart, Kristine, Warby, Meera, Tucker, Katherine M., Lee, Brittany M., O’Brien, Tracey A., Wakefield, Claire E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9410181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36013276
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm12081327
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author Hunter, Jacqueline D.
Robertson, Eden G.
Hetherington, Kate
Ziegler, David S.
Marshall, Glenn M.
Kirk, Judy
Marron, Jonathan M.
Denburg, Avram E.
Barlow-Stewart, Kristine
Warby, Meera
Tucker, Katherine M.
Lee, Brittany M.
O’Brien, Tracey A.
Wakefield, Claire E.
author_facet Hunter, Jacqueline D.
Robertson, Eden G.
Hetherington, Kate
Ziegler, David S.
Marshall, Glenn M.
Kirk, Judy
Marron, Jonathan M.
Denburg, Avram E.
Barlow-Stewart, Kristine
Warby, Meera
Tucker, Katherine M.
Lee, Brittany M.
O’Brien, Tracey A.
Wakefield, Claire E.
author_sort Hunter, Jacqueline D.
collection PubMed
description Current literature/guidelines regarding the most appropriate term to communicate a cancer-related disease-causing germline variant in childhood cancer lack consensus. Guidelines also rarely address preferences of patients/families. We aimed to assess preferences of parents of children with cancer, genetics professionals, and pediatric oncologists towards terminology to describe a disease-causing germline variant in childhood cancer. Using semi-structured interviews we asked participants their most/least preferred terms from; ‘faulty gene,’ ‘altered gene,’ ‘gene change,’ and ‘genetic variant,’ analyzing responses with directed content analysis. Twenty-five parents, 6 genetics professionals, and 29 oncologists participated. An equal number of parents most preferred ‘gene change,’ ‘altered gene,’ or ‘genetic variant’ (n = 8/25). Parents least preferred ‘faulty gene’ (n = 18/25). Half the genetics professionals most preferred ‘faulty gene’ (n = 3/6); however this was least preferred by the remaining genetics professionals (n = 3/6). Many oncologists most preferred ‘genetic variant’ (n = 11/29) and least preferred ‘faulty gene’ (n = 19/29). Participants across all groups perceived ‘faulty gene’ as having negative connotations, potentially placing blame/guilt on parents/children. Health professionals described challenges selecting a term that was scientifically accurate, easily understood and not distressing to families. Lack of consensus highlights the need to be guided by families’ preferred terminology, while providing accurate explanations regarding implications of genetic findings.
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spelling pubmed-94101812022-08-26 What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes Hunter, Jacqueline D. Robertson, Eden G. Hetherington, Kate Ziegler, David S. Marshall, Glenn M. Kirk, Judy Marron, Jonathan M. Denburg, Avram E. Barlow-Stewart, Kristine Warby, Meera Tucker, Katherine M. Lee, Brittany M. O’Brien, Tracey A. Wakefield, Claire E. J Pers Med Article Current literature/guidelines regarding the most appropriate term to communicate a cancer-related disease-causing germline variant in childhood cancer lack consensus. Guidelines also rarely address preferences of patients/families. We aimed to assess preferences of parents of children with cancer, genetics professionals, and pediatric oncologists towards terminology to describe a disease-causing germline variant in childhood cancer. Using semi-structured interviews we asked participants their most/least preferred terms from; ‘faulty gene,’ ‘altered gene,’ ‘gene change,’ and ‘genetic variant,’ analyzing responses with directed content analysis. Twenty-five parents, 6 genetics professionals, and 29 oncologists participated. An equal number of parents most preferred ‘gene change,’ ‘altered gene,’ or ‘genetic variant’ (n = 8/25). Parents least preferred ‘faulty gene’ (n = 18/25). Half the genetics professionals most preferred ‘faulty gene’ (n = 3/6); however this was least preferred by the remaining genetics professionals (n = 3/6). Many oncologists most preferred ‘genetic variant’ (n = 11/29) and least preferred ‘faulty gene’ (n = 19/29). Participants across all groups perceived ‘faulty gene’ as having negative connotations, potentially placing blame/guilt on parents/children. Health professionals described challenges selecting a term that was scientifically accurate, easily understood and not distressing to families. Lack of consensus highlights the need to be guided by families’ preferred terminology, while providing accurate explanations regarding implications of genetic findings. MDPI 2022-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9410181/ /pubmed/36013276 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm12081327 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hunter, Jacqueline D.
Robertson, Eden G.
Hetherington, Kate
Ziegler, David S.
Marshall, Glenn M.
Kirk, Judy
Marron, Jonathan M.
Denburg, Avram E.
Barlow-Stewart, Kristine
Warby, Meera
Tucker, Katherine M.
Lee, Brittany M.
O’Brien, Tracey A.
Wakefield, Claire E.
What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes
title What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes
title_full What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes
title_fullStr What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes
title_full_unstemmed What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes
title_short What’s in a Name? Parents’ and Healthcare Professionals’ Preferred Terminology for Pathogenic Variants in Childhood Cancer Predisposition Genes
title_sort what’s in a name? parents’ and healthcare professionals’ preferred terminology for pathogenic variants in childhood cancer predisposition genes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9410181/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36013276
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm12081327
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