Elsevier

Genetics in Medicine

Volume 16, Issue 12, December 2014, Pages 977-980
Genetics in Medicine

Brief Report
How do research participants perceive “uncertainty” in genome sequencing?

https://doi.org/10.1038/gim.2014.57Get rights and content
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Abstract

Purpose

The scope of uncertainty in genome sequence information has no rival in health-care delivery. We present data from adults participating in a National Institutes of Health study using this technology, in which perceptions of uncertainty are hypothesized to be key in predicting decisions to learn and act on genome health information.

Methods

We conducted six professionally moderated focus groups with 39 randomly selected ClinSeq participants varying on whether they had coronary heart disease and had received prior sequence results. We elicited perceptions of the uncertainties associated with genome sequencing using written prompts.

Results

Participants perceived uncertainty as a quality of genome information. The majority of participants characterized uncertainty of sequencing information as “changing, fluid, developing, or ground breaking.” These responses led to anticipation of more optimistic future outcomes. Fewer participants described uncertainty as “questionable, less accurate, limited, or poorly understood.” These perceptions seemed to undermine participants’ faith in genome information, leading to feelings of disillusionment.

Conclusion

Our findings suggest that perceptions of uncertainty are related to epistemological beliefs that inform expectations for the information. Interventions that promote realistic expectations of genome sequencing may mitigate negative responses to uncertainty.

Genet Med16 12, 977–980.

Keywords

epistemological beliefs
expectations
genome sequencing
informed choice
uncertainty

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