Abstract

Genetic testing and counselling are increasingly important in epilepsy care, aiming at finding a diagnosis, understanding aetiology and improving treatment and outcome. The psychological impact of genetic counselling from patients' or parents' perspectives is, however, unknown. We studied the counselee-reported outcome of genetic counselling before and after genetic testing for epilepsy by evaluating empowerment - a key outcome goal of counselling reflecting cognitive, decisional and behavioural control, emotional regulation and hope - and anxiety. We asked patients or their parents (for those <16 years or intellectually disabled) referred for genetic testing for epilepsy in two university hospitals between June 2014 and 2017 to complete the same two questionnaires at three timepoints: before and after pre-test counselling and after post-test counselling. Empowerment was measured with the Genetic Counselling Outcome Scale (GCOS-18); anxiety with the short State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-6). A total of 63 participants (55 parents with the age of 29-66 years; 8 patients with the age of 21-42 years) were included in our study. Empowerment significantly increased during the genetic counselling trajectory with a medium effect size (p<0.001, d=0.57). A small but significant increase in empowerment was already seen after pre-test counselling (p=0.038, d=0.29). Anxiety did not change significantly during the counselling trajectory (p=0.223, d=-0.24). Our study highlights that patients with epilepsy or their parents show a clinically relevant increase in empowerment after genetic counselling. Empowerment was already increased after pre-test counselling, suggesting the importance of counselling before initiating genetic testing for epilepsy. However, individual differences in changes in empowerment and anxiety were seen, suggesting that counselling could be further improved, based on individual needs.

Highlights

  • The increasing use of genetic testing in individuals with epilepsy is transforming epilepsy care

  • We aimed to study the outcome of genetic counselling both before and after genetic testing for epilepsy by evaluating empowerment and anxiety of the counselee

  • In our follow-up study on epilepsy, patients who were referred for genetic counselling and genetic testing for epilepsy between June 2014 and June 2017 were eligible for inclusion and we studied their change in empowerment and anxiety in more detail

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Summary

Introduction

The increasing use of genetic testing in individuals with epilepsy is transforming epilepsy care. Finding a genetic cause for epilepsy, while currently only possible in a minority of patients, precludes unnecessary further diagnostic investigations and leads to a better understanding of the epilepsy aetiology, comorbidities, prognosis and recurrence risks [1e4]. Genetic testing in epilepsy is, increasingly becoming part of the routine diagnostic care [7e10]. Little is known about the psychological outcomes of genetic services from the patients' or parents’ perspective [11e13]. Blame and anxiety with negative test results They described potential concerns, including increased blame, guilt, stigma, discrimination, self-imposed limitations on life goals and alterations in fundamental conceptions of ‘what epilepsy is’ [16]. The psychological outcomes of genetic services for epilepsy have not been studied systematically

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