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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Not yet recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT06455384
Other study ID # 4033
Secondary ID
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date July 1, 2024
Est. completion date July 1, 2026

Study information

Verified date June 2024
Source Unity Health Toronto
Contact Marc Clausen, MA
Phone 416-864-6060
Email Marc.Clausen@unityhealth.to
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Genetic testing (GT) (including targeted panels, exome and genome sequencing) is increasingly being used for patient care as it improves diagnosis and health outcomes. In spite of these benefits, genetic testing is a complex and costly health service. This results in unequal access, increased wait times and inconsistencies in care. The use of e-health tools to support genetic testing delivery can result in a better patient experience and reduced distress associated with waiting for results and empower patients to receive and act on medical results. We have previously developed and tested an interactive, adaptable and patient-centred digital decision support tool (Genetics ADvISER) to be used for genetic testing decision making, and have now developed the Genetics Navigator (GN), a patient-centred e-health navigation platform for end-to-end genetic service delivery. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the GN in an RCT in reducing distress with patients and parents of patients being offered genetic testing. Results of this trial will be used to establish whether the GN is effective to use in practice. If effective, GN could fill a critical clinical care gap and improve health outcomes and service use by reducing counselling burden as well as overuse, underuse and misuse of services. These are concerns policy makers seek to address through the triple aims of health care1. This study represents a significant advance in personalized health by assessing the effectiveness of this novel, comprehensive e-health platform to ultimately improve genetic service delivery, accessibility, patient experiences, and patient outcomes.


Description:

BACKGROUND: Genetic testing is a catalyst for personalized health. Technologies such as targeted panels and genomic sequencing (GS) are exerting a profound influence on clinical care by ushering personalized medicine into mainstream practice. With substantial improvements in diagnostic performance has come unprecedented demand for genetic testing for a broad range of clinical indications.The volume of testing and complexity of genetic testing analysis places unsustainable pressure on the standard model of care for delivering genetics services, which is heavily dependent on multiple interconnected clinical specialists including medical geneticists, genetic counsellors, clinical laboratory directors, bioinformaticians, and genome analysts based in tertiary care centres. With this increased demand, innovative strategies for increasing capacity and efficiency of genetic service delivery are needed. Our research team has built on our previous preliminary work to develop the Genetics Navigator (GN) to fill this gap. The GN is meant to provide end-to-end support to genomic services and patients who are offered genetic testing. The GN is meant to provide patients with information about genetic testing, help patients make decisions about genetic testing, collect patient history and family history collection before their appointment, and provide genetic test results. The study is interested in comparing the effectiveness of the Genetics Navigator with traditional medical appointments with genetic counsellors and medical geneticists. RATIONALE: There are limited e-health tools for the delivery of GS. Few e-health tools exist to support the comprehensive delivery of GS and very few have been rigorously evaluated.61 Existing tools target cancer settings,42 education36 or return of results46 but are not integrated to enable a seamless end-to-end patient journey. Consequently, existing tools are limited in scope and scale. Finally, due to the lack of comprehensive e-health tools for GS, little is known about end users' needs for an e-health platform. Understanding end users' needs and requirements are critical to the development of an effective e-health solution for GS health service delivery. Finally, the development of our Genetics Navigator tool represents an innovative strategy to address significant health service delivery barriers and advance the implementation of personalized health by increasing efficiency of genetic service delivery and improving patient experience. OBJECTIVES AND HYPOTHESIS: Evaluate the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and user experience of the Genetics Navigator compared to usual care (standard genetic counselling) with patients and parents of patients receiving genetic testing. Hypothesis: Use of the Genetics Navigator will improve emotional functioning (decrease distress [primary outcome], anxiety, and decisional conflict), knowledge, quality of life, patient empowerment, personal utility, and intention to and actual follow through with management recommendations compared to usual care. METHOD: This is a non-blinded prospective repeated measures randomized controlled superiority trial where we will evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Genetics Navigator in reducing patient distress compared to usual care. As a part of this trial, patients will receive genetic test results related to a range of clinical indications. A qualitative sub-study will examine user experience. STUDY POPULATION: Trial: Adult genetics patients (aged ≥18 years) at Sinai Health System (Sinai) and University Health Network (UHN), and parents/legal guardians of pediatric patients at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) who are currently eligible to receive clinical genetic testing, as determined by a medical geneticist. Qualitative Interviews: We will interview a purposive sample of up to 20 adult patients and 20 parents/ legal guardians in each arm within 6 months of completing their participation. INTERVENTION: Participants in the intervention arm will use the Genetics Navigator to support the delivery of genetic services, including intake, education, pre- and post-test counselling, and physician-generated management recommendations. The Navigator will be supported by consults with genetics professionals via in-person/phone/video-conferencing. CONTROL:Participants in the control arm will receive their genetic counselling and test results through usual care, which consists of in-person/phone/video-conference consults with genetic counsellors and medical geneticists.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Not yet recruiting
Enrollment 140
Est. completion date July 1, 2026
Est. primary completion date December 1, 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion: - Adult patients (18 years of age or older) who are referred to participating clinicians at UHN for clinical genetic testing. - Parents/legal guardians (18 years of age or older) of pediatric patients who are referred to participating clinicians at SickKids for clinical genetic testing. Exclusion: - Known not to be eligible for clinical genetic testing in Ontario - Requires urgent clinical genetic testing or prenatal genetic testing - Not fluent in English (speaking and reading)

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Genetics Navigator
The Genetics Navigator will be used to support patients during the delivery of genetic services, including intake, education, pre- and post-test counselling, and physician-generated management recommendations
Standard Care with Genetics Professionals
Standard care for the delivery of genetic services, including receiving genetic counselling and test results

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada Mount Sinai Hospital Toronto Ontario
Canada The Hospital for Sick Children Toronto Ontario
Canada University Health Network Toronto Ontario

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Unity Health Toronto

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Multi-Dimensional Impact of Cancer Risk Assessment (MICRA) The Multi-Dimensional Impact of Cancer Risk Assessment (MICRA) is a 25-item standardized, validated scale that measures the impact of result disclosure from genetic tests. There are three subscales: Distress (6 items), Uncertainty (9 items) and Positive Experiences (4 items). Total scores range from 0-125, with higher scores indicating worse outcome. Scores on the Distress subscale range from 0-30, with higher scores indicating worse outcome. Scores on the Uncertainty subscale range from 0-45, with higher scores indicating worse outcome. Scores on the Positive Experiences Subscale range from 0-20, with higher scores indicating worse outcomes. (PMID: 12433008) At 5 months, 6 months and 9 months after baseline
Secondary University of North Carolina Genomic Knowledge Scale (UNC-GKS) Knowledge is measured using the Genomic Knowledge Scale developed by The University of North Carolina. The scale is an established scale measuring genomics knowledge. Patients mark 25 statements about genes, genetic effects on health, familial inheritance, and diagnostic exome sequencing. Respondents mark each as true, false, or not sure/don't know (scored as incorrect). Correct responses are scored as 1 and summed. Possible scores range from 0-25. Higher scores indicates a higher level of knowledge (PMID: 29928697). Assessed at baseline, 2 weeks, 1 month, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary SURE The SURE screening test is a 4-item tool to assess decisional conflict in patients, developed by Légaré et al. Each item is scored as a yes (1) or no (0), and a total score is calculated by summing all items. A score less than 4 indicates the probability that a patient experiences clinically significant decisional conflict. Assessed at 1 month
Secondary Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) Measured using the 14 item scale, each item is answered on a four point (0-3) response category. Possible scores ranged from 0 to 21 for anxiety and 0 to 21 for depression. Items can be summed and scored for both depression and anxiety, with a score above 11 indicates a case (depression or anxiety). Assessed at baseline, 2 weeks, 1 month, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary The Genomics Outcome Scale (GOS) Patient empowerment is measured using the a shorter version of the Genetic Counselling Outcome Scale (GCOS-24), called Genomics Outcome Scale (GOS). The scale uses 6 patient reported outcome measure items to evaluate genetic counselling and testing services. Each item is scored on a 5-point scale and the final score is calculated by summing all items. Each of the 6 items in the measure is rated on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree) with possible total scores ranging from 6 to 42. A higher score indicates greater empowerment. (PMID: 30496830) Assessed at 2 weeks, 1 month, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary 36-item Short Form Survey (SF-36) The SF-36 scale measures quality of life. The SF-36 has 36 items that address physical and mental functioning. Physical and mental health composite scores range from 0 to 100, with 0 indicating the lowest possible level of health, and 100 indicating the highest possible level of health. Assessed at baseline, 2 weeks, 1 month, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary Satisfaction with Decision Making Scale A six item scale measures a patient satisfaction with a health care decision. Items are scored 1-4. A higher score signifies a higher level of satisfaction or preparation with a decision. Items can be summed and scored (sum the 6 items and divide by 6). Assessed at 1 month
Secondary Preparation for Decision Making Scale A 10 item scale assesses a patient's perception of how useful a decision aid or other decision support intervention is in preparing the respondent to communicate with their practitioner at a consultation visit and making a health decision. Items are scored 1-4. Items can be summed and scored (sum the 10 items and divide by 10). A higher score indicates a higher level of preparation. Assessed at 1 month
Secondary Acceptability e-Scale The 6 item Acceptability E-Scale measures acceptability and usability of the platform. The AES includes dimensions of ease of use, understandability of questions, enjoyability of experience, whether the length of time is acceptable, helpfulness, and overall satisfaction, using a 5-point response scale for each item (1=not acceptable, 5=highly acceptable). Scores range from 6 to 30 with a higher score indicating higher acceptability. Assessed at 2 weeks, 1 month, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary Digital Health Literacy Scale (DHLS) Digital Health Literacy Scale (DHLS) is a 3 item scale that measures a respondent's perceived skill at using and applying electronic information technology to health problems. Each item is on a five-point Likert scale ranging from strongly agree to strongly disagree, with responses being assigned a value of 0-4. The scores range from 0-12 with higher scores indicating higher digital health care literacy. Control: Assessed at baseline; Intervention: Assessed at baseline
Secondary Frequency of platform use Measure of the amount of times the digital platform was accessed by the participant. Baseline
Secondary Duration of platform session Measure of total time spent using the digital platform. 2 weeks, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary Answers to platform questions Measure of value preferences, preference lean and preparation for results. Assessed at 2 weeks, 5 months, 6 months and 9 months
Secondary Duration of genetic counselling session Measure of total time spent with Genetic counselor in the counselling session. Control: immediately after pre-test meeting with clinician, immediately after post-test meeting with clinician; Intervention: immediately after pre-test meeting with clinician, immediately after post-test meeting with clinician
Secondary Qualitative outcomes of counselling sessions Patients pre- and post-test clinical encounters will be assessed based off of medical chart notes. 2 weeks and 6 months
Secondary Qualitative interviews with a subset of participants and providers We will use in-depth interviews with patients to provide further insights into the delivery and support of genetic services. Interviews will consider participants' socio-demographic factors that may influence their informational, decisional, and follow-up needs as well as how they engage with genetic information, participate in shared decision making, and manage genetic test results. The qualitative analyses for the interviews will draw on grounded theory. We will use open coding, constant comparison and axial coding to identify common and divergent themes to characterize the entire dataset. Two researchers will code transcripts independently; consensus on codes will be reached through discussion. Validation methods may include triangulation and member checking. In keeping with qualitative methodology, data analysis will occur in conjunction with data collection. On-going analysis will inform the development of progressive iterations of the interview guides. 9 months
Secondary BRIEF Health Literacy Screening Tool (BRIEF) BREIF is a 4-item scale used to assess health literacy. Each item is quantified using a 5-point scale (1-5) with higher scores indicating higher health literacy. Assessed at baseline
Secondary Health Resource Use Questionnaire (RUQ) This survey was developed to learn more about the resources related to health, social and community services used to reduce stress of anxiety related to coping with a patient's condition. This is not a scale, each items reports descriptively Assessed at 1 month and 9 months
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