Abstract

Ultra rare disorders are being diagnosed at an unprecedented rate, due to genomic sequencing. These diagnoses are often a new gene association, for which little is known, and few share the diagnosis. For these diagnoses, we use the term emerging-ultrarare disorder (E-URD), defined as <100 diagnosed individuals. We contacted 20 parents of children diagnosed with an E-URD through the Duke University Research Sequencing Clinic. Seventeen completed semi-structured interviews exploring parental perspectives (7/17 had children in publications describing the phenotype; 4/17 had children in the first publication establishing a new disorder). Data were analyzed using a directed content approach informed by an empowerment framework. Parents reported a range of responses, including benefits of a diagnosis and challenges of facing the unknown, some described feeling lost and confused, while others expressed empowerment. Empowerment characteristics were hope for the future, positive emotions, engagement, and confidence/self-efficacy to connect with similar others, partner with healthcare providers, and seek new knowledge. We identified a subset of parents who proactively engaged researchers, supported research and publications, and created patient advocacy and support organizations to connect with and bolster similarly diagnosed families. Other parents reported challenges of low social support, low tolerance for uncertainty, limited knowledge about their child's disorder, as well as difficulty partnering with HCPs and connecting to an E-URD community. An overarching classification was developed to describe parental actions taken after an E-URD diagnosis: adjusting, managing, and pioneering. These classifications may help genetic counselors identify and facilitate positive steps with parents of a child with an E-URD.

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