Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05064241 |
Other study ID # |
P00039779 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
April 15, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
September 30, 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2023 |
Source |
Boston Children's Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
To learn about patient barriers to accessing genetic medicine, we will analyze anonymous
posts from a membership-based online community [Inspire.com], and investigate how these
barriers differ for various populations. We will then test whether these barriers can be
addressed by providing online access to a genetic counselor to answer patient questions for
one group of patients (virtual advisory board group) and compare to that of a control group
who does not have access to a genetic counselor (virtual peer-to-peer board group).
Description:
Genomic medicine has the potential to advance diagnoses, predict risk, support prevention
efforts, and inform treatment decision-making. Though technologies for measuring genetic
variants have improved and become more cost-effective, clinical integration of genomic
medicine has been surprisingly slow. For genomic medicine to be successfully implemented
across specialties and across demographics, the systemic barriers that patients experience
need to be identified and addressed.
Online health support is becoming an increasingly important part of healthcare as more
patients use digital health networks. In the first part of this study, an analysis of online
communication in a membership-based online support community [Inspire.com] will identify
systemic, structural and individual barriers to accessing genomic medicine. A genetic
counselor will be informed to these results and will be part of the intervention arm of the
study.
To assess the extent to which online health networks can directly help genomic medicine
implementation, participants will join one of two Virtual Discussion Boards (a Virtual
Advisory Board and a Virtual Peer-to-Peer Discussion Board). In the intervention arm, the
Virtual Advisory Board will have a genetic counselor answer patient questions online about
genomic medicine once every week for a period of three months. In the control arm,
participants will answer and comment on each others' questions in the Virtual Peer-to-Peer
Discussion Board. We hypothesize that after six months, patients who participate in the
Virtual Advisory Board are more likely to self-report receiving genomic medicine than those
in the control arm. After completion of the study, participants in the Peer-to-Peer
Discussion Board, we will give online access to the genetic counselor to answer any questions