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Erschienen in: Journal of Genetic Counseling 5/2016

04.03.2016 | Original Research

“Something Extra on Chromosome 5”: Parents’ Understanding of Positive Prenatal Chromosomal Microarray Analysis (CMA) Results

verfasst von: Sarah A. Walser, Allison Werner-Lin, Amita Russell, Ronald J. Wapner, Barbara A. Bernhardt

Erschienen in: Journal of Genetic Counseling | Ausgabe 5/2016

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Abstract

This study aims to explore how couples’ understanding of the nature and consequences of positive prenatal chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) results impacts decision-making and concern about pregnancy. We interviewed 28 women and 12 male partners after receiving positive results and analyzed the transcripts to assess their understanding and level of concern about the expected clinical implications of results. Participant descriptions were compared to the original laboratory interpretation. When diagnosed prenatally, couples’ understanding of the nature and consequences of copy number variants (CNVs) impacts decision-making and concern. Findings suggest women, but less so partners, generally understand the nature and clinical implications of prenatal CMA results. Couples feel reassured, perhaps sometimes falsely so, when a CNV is inherited from a “normal” parent and experience considerable uncertainty when a CNV is de novo, frequently precipitating a search for additional information and guidance. Five factors influenced participants’ concern including: the pattern of inheritance, type of possible phenotypic involvement, perceived manageability of outcomes, availability and strength of evidence about outcomes associated with the CNV, and provider messages about continuing the pregnancy. A good understanding of results is vital as couples decide whether or not to continue with their pregnancy and seek additional information to assist in pregnancy decision-making.
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Metadaten
Titel
“Something Extra on Chromosome 5”: Parents’ Understanding of Positive Prenatal Chromosomal Microarray Analysis (CMA) Results
verfasst von
Sarah A. Walser
Allison Werner-Lin
Amita Russell
Ronald J. Wapner
Barbara A. Bernhardt
Publikationsdatum
04.03.2016
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Genetic Counseling / Ausgabe 5/2016
Print ISSN: 1059-7700
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-3599
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10897-016-9943-z

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