open access publication

Article, 2024

Actionability and familial uptake following opportunistic genomic screening in a pediatric cancer cohort

European Journal of Human Genetics, ISSN 1476-5438, 1018-4813, Volume 32, 7, Pages 846-857, 10.1038/s41431-024-01618-7

Contributors

Hammer-Hansen, Sophia 0000-0003-1298-7490 [1] Stoltze, Ulrik Kristoffer [1] Bartels, Emil Daniel 0000-0002-8290-5772 [1] Hansen, Thomas Van Overeem 0000-0003-4635-2653 [1] Byrjalsen, Anna [1] Tybjærg-Hansen, Anne [1] Juul, Klaus [1] Schmiegelow, Kjeld 0000-0002-0829-4993 [1] Tfelt, Jacob [1] Bundgaard, Henning 0000-0002-0563-7049 [1] Wadt, Karin [1] Diness, Birgitte Rode (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Rigshospitalet
  2. [NORA names: Capital Region of Denmark; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

The care for patients with serious conditions is increasingly guided by genomic medicine, and genomic medicine may equally transform care for healthy individual if genomic population screening is implemented. This study examines the medical impact of opportunistic genomic screening (OGS) in a cohort of patients undergoing comprehensive genomic germline DNA testing for childhood cancer, including the impact on their relatives. Medical actionability and uptake after cascade testing in the period following disclosure of OGS results was quantified. A secondary finding was reported to 19/595 (3.2%) probands primarily in genes related to cardiovascular and lipid disorders. After a mean follow up time of 1.6 years (Interquartile range (IQR): 0.57-1.92 yrs.) only 12 (63%) of these variants were found to be medically actionable. Clinical follow up or treatment was planned in 16 relatives, and as in the probands, the prescribed treatment was primarily betablockers or cholesterol lowering therapy. No invasive procedures or implantation of medical devices were performed in probands or relatives, and no reproductive counseling was requested. After an average of 1.6 years of follow-up 2.25 relatives per family with an actionable finding had been tested. This real-world experience of OGS grants new insight into the practical implementation effects and derived health care demands of genotype-first screening. The resulting health care effect and impact on demand for genetic counseling and workup in relatives extends beyond the effect in the probands.

Keywords

DNA testing, action, average, betablockers, cancer, cancer cohort, care, care demands, care effectiveness, childhood, childhood cancer, cholesterol, cholesterol lowering therapy, cohort, cohort of patients, conditions, counseling, demand, devices, disclosure, disorders, effect, family, findings, follow, follow-up, follow-up time, genes, genetic counseling, genomic medicine, genomic screening, germline DNA testing, health, health care demand, health care effectiveness, healthy individuals, impact, implantation, implantation of medical devices, implementation, implementation effect, individuals, insights, lipid, lipid disorders, lowering therapy, medical action, medical devices, medical impact, medicine, new insights, opportunistic genomic screening, patients, period, population screening, prescribed treatment, probands, relations, results, screening, secondary findings, study, test, therapy, time, transform care, treatment, uptake, variants, workup, years, years of follow-up

Funders

  • Danish Cancer Society
  • European Commission

Data Provider: Digital Science