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About
A radical paradigm shift is taking place where technology, notably the explosion in easy accessible direct-to-consumer genetic testing (e.g., 23andMe) and a high consumer interest in genealogy (e.g., Ancestry.com), has hijacked gamete (eggs, sperm) and embryo donation recipient parents' control over whether to inform their children about their donor conception. Historically, the practice of gamete donation has been shrouded in secrecy, however, the skyrocketing use of direct-to-consumer genetic testing means that at any point in an adult life, an uninformed donor-conceived person can learn their DNA does not match their presumed ancestry of their parents and family members, putting into question their genetic relatedness to their parents and launching a spiraling sequence of negative health consequences and trauma. Furthermore, the lack of one's knowledge about actual genetic heritage in the age of precision medicine can be enormously detrimental to health and can result in medical maltreatment, including death. To address this serious problem and in accordance with International Patient Decision Aid Standards, we developed a digital, tailored, multicomponent Tool to Empower ParentaL TeLling and Talking (i.e., TELL Tool). The objective of this R34 study is to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effects of the TELL Tool intervention in a pilot randomized-controlled feasibility trial with 60 donor-recipient parents and 10 clinicians to determine intervention viability and inform a larger, efficacy trial. An eBook with content about good parenting principles serves as the attention control.
Full description
The feasibility trail will use a longitudinal, mixed-methods design that is guided by International Patient Decision Aid Standards and NIH Guidelines for pilot studies. The study design is necessary to achieve the objective of the study, which is to examine the feasibility and acceptability of the TELL Tool intervention in a pilot randomized-controlled feasibility trial to determine intervention viability and inform a larger, efficacy trial. There are three Specific Aims that are: Aim 1 determine feasibility of the study procedures (e.g., recruitment, retention) by pilot testing the TELL Tool using a 2-arm randomized-controlled trial (RCT) with 60 donor-recipient parents using pre- to post-test measures for disclosure intention, competence, and anxiety. (A pretesting of the measures will be implemented with 8 to 12 donor-recipient parents, who are not participants of the pilot RCT, prior to launching the RCT.); Aim 2 survey participating donor-recipient parents at 2 additional time points (4 and 12 weeks/months 1 and 3) post-intervention/attention control completion to obtain meaningful outcome data about actual parental disclosure to their donor-conceived children; and Aim 3 refine the study tools (e.g., TELL Tool, eBook) through post-intervention/attention control written evaluations with participating donor-recipient parents and cognitive interviews with 10 donor-recipient parents, who are a sub-sample of parents from our larger sample of parents, and 10 clinicians. The findings will inform the final protocol for a larger, efficacy trial.
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Inclusion Criteria Parents:
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Exclusion Criteria Parents:
Exclusion Criteria Clinicians:
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75 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Patricia Hershberger, PhD; Kirby Adlam
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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