Pregnancy Related Clinical Trial
Official title:
Expanded Prenatal Testing Options and Informed Choice
The proposed study will determine the impact of providing complete information about all prenatal tests for chromosomal disorders to racially/ethnically and sociodemographically diverse women of all ages and allowing them to make informed choices regarding which tests - if any - to undergo. Specifically, we propose to update a validated prenatal testing decision-assisting tool ("PT Tool") to incorporate new screening options and make it more accessible to lower literacy and culturally diverse populations. We then will conduct a randomized controlled trial comparing the effect of an "informed free choice" approach consisting of providing complete information regarding and access to all prenatal testing options to that of usual care among a diverse population of pregnant women.
Our primary goal is to generate evidence needed to determine whether clinicians should
consider an alternative to the current practice of using risk-based thresholds for invasive
testing that would allow all women to make informed choices reflective of their values and
preferences. A second goal is to expand PT Tool to include new screening tests and modify it
for clinical use by lower literacy populations, so that pregnant women of diverse
backgrounds will have accurate and unbiased information about the complex array of testing
options, thereby minimizing barriers to and disparities in informed choice.
Specific Aim 1) Determine which testing strategies are selected by a racially/ethnically,
socioeconomically, and age-diverse group of pregnant women who receive complete information
on all testing options and have all options available to them compared to women receiving
usual care.
Specific Aim 2) Update the English-language version of PT Tool and create a Spanish-language
version to include the most up-to-date information on new and forthcoming prenatal screening
options and modify it for use in clinics by women of varying literacy levels.
Specific Aim 3) Assess the impact of receiving complete information on all testing options
and having all options available on knowledge, risk comprehension, and decisional conflict
compared to usual care.
We will perform an open, parallel-comparison randomized clinical trial of an "informed free
choice" approach to prenatal testing to usual care in 1200 women presenting for prenatal
care by 20 gestational weeks. 600 women will be randomized to usual care, the control group,
in which they will receive no intervention beyond a baseline pre-randomization interview and
a follow-up telephone interview. The other 600 women will be randomized to "informed free
choice," in which they will be instructed to view the updated PT Tool and will be told that
they can have whatever tests they would like (including no tests) and that tests that are
not covered by their insurance will be paid for by the study. They also will participate in
a follow-up telephone interview.
Revised clinicaltrials.gov protocol. The original study design was proposed and funded
during the era when guidelines from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
(ACOG) regarding access to prenatal testing differed by maternal age stratum (less than 35
years at the age of delivery versus 35 years or older). Our original primary hypothesis
posited that the effect of IFC would increase invasive test use among women who were less
than 35 years old while decreasing invasive test use among women 35 years or older. The
thought underlying this hypothesis was that the younger women, who traditionally were not
informed of this option, and for whom insurance coverage for these procedures was not
consistently available, would increase their overall invasive test use if these
informational and financial barriers to were removed in the context of the study. On the
other hand, women 35 years and older, for whom the offer of invasive diagnostic testing was
considered routine, would become more informed about the risks and benefits of both
screening and invasive diagnostic testing, would be less likely to default to invasive
testing. The original sample size estimate was N=1200 women.
After we began enrolling women in the study and the new ACOG guidelines were issued, the
prenatal testing decision support guide we had created was out-of-date with respect to the
array of available prenatal screening and diagnostic tests and restrictions on invasive test
use based upon maternal age. We therefore decided to end the original trial (N=381). We
completely revised the decision support guide to describe the new screening options and
better represent the current policy landscape. We also reformulated our primary hypothesis
to eliminate the age dichotomy, and initiated a new randomized trial using the revised
decision support guide to be completed within the time and budgetary constraints of the
initially funded project.
Our primary hypothesis was that women who were randomized to informed free choice would
undergo invasive prenatal diagnostic testing at a lower rate than women randomized to the
usual care group, regardless of maternal age. Given that the restrictions on access to
testing based upon maternal age had been eliminated, we hypothesized that women of all ages
who were randomized to informed free choice would have lower invasive test use rates
compared to women randomized to usual care. In our study of trends in the use of invasive
diagnostic testing among women who delivered at an integrated health care system in
California, we found that the number of amniocenteses and CVS procedures performed as a
percentage of the total number of deliveries in 2006 was 12.1% (Norton ref). Assuming
N=1200-381=819 participants for the new trial, 80% power, two-tailed alpha equal to 0.05,
90% retention at follow-up, and a 12.1% invasive test use rate within the usual care group,
the design was capable of detecting a group difference corresponding to an invasive test use
rate of ≤6.2% in the informed free choice group (OR=2.10, a 'small-medium' effect size). We
also hypothesized that compared to usual care, women in informed free choice would have
increased testing knowledge and risk comprehension as well as reduced decisional conflict,
regret, and pregnancy worry; the design was capable of a minimum detectable a group
difference equal to d=0.21 standard deviations, which is considered a 'small' effect size.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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