Good news from genetic screening tests can bring more to its recipients than relief:it also can bring
doubts about the future and, in some cases, guilt. A University of Iowa study reported recently that individuals who
received negative results from genetic screening for Huntington's disease - they did not carry the gene mutation that causes
the debilitating and fatal disorder - usually "were not prepared for the implications of a 'good news' test outcome."
"They
never reported uncomplicated joy," said Janet Williams, PhD, associate professor of nursing at the University of Iowa and
principal investigator for the study. "The joy and relief were accompanied by concerns" about how family members
might receive the news and how to adjust to a life now free of anxiety about when symptoms of Huntington's disease might begin
to appear. Some even doubted the test results, the study reported.
Published in the August issue of Research
in Nursing and Health, the study involved a small number of individuals over a relatively short period of time. Even
so, Williams said, it identified important themes with respect to genetic testing. First and foremost, informed consent
and one-on-one counseling should be a part of every testing program.
"Many of the people we talked with were working
this out on their own," Williams said. "Health providers should be aware that this is a group that may benefit from
supportive counseling."
Each child of an individual with Huntington's disease has a 50% chance of inheriting the gene
mutation. Thus, Williams said, families with a history of the disease generally have an intimate understanding of the illness
and a sense of shared risk.
When a family learns one of its members has sought genetic testing for the mutation, its
group dynamic may be altered irreversibly. "People who have this test are often departing from family norms," Williams
said, "and that somewhat isolates these individuals."
Family relationships may be further upset when an individual's
negative test result contradicts the expectation that he or she will develop the disease. Williams explained that
a phenomenon known as preselection often exists within families with a history of Huntington's.
Consciously or unconsciously, family members assign risk to individuals based on beliefs about who
is likely to develop the illness; for example, if in previous generations the oldest child often inherited the disease, family
members may assume that will be true in their case as well.
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When that assumption proves false, Williams said, families face the need to adapt. "Biological information
such as this removes the comfort they may have had in 'knowing' who was going to get the disease," she said. "There are a
number of issues that mean life is not going to be the same within the family once a person learns they don't have it."
The
individual's response to a negative test result is no less complicated. According to the study, "Adults with normal results
had prepared themselves for the worst, and they expected that they would have the gene mutation."
"I think
that's their coping mechanism," said Catherine Evers, a coauthor of the study and an advanced practice nurse who is coordinator
of the Regional Genetic Consultation Service based at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. "When you tell them they
don't have it, based on a gene test that's very accurate, some
of them have a hard time believing you," Evers said. "We've had individuals say to us, 'we'd better do the test again.' "
Study
participants had difficulty knowing how to relate to family members who might have the disease. One individual spoke of encountering
a cousin who has Huntington's disease, "who I related to really easily before, because I figured I was going to be in the
same boat, but it was harder for me to feel the same empathy. I didn't tell him, I could not tell him my test results."
Another reported that while some relatives were supportive, "there's been other people that have been almost jealous. That's
the ones that I regret telling."
Ultimately, the study said, individuals who learn they do not carry the gene for Huntington's
disease face the need to redefine their goals and purpose in life. Six months after learning their test results, participants
"began to discard their prior assumptions and started to consider themselves as healthy individuals who might live a long
life."
"It gives them a whole different perspective on what their potential is," Evers said. "We do see people who
change jobs, or go to school who hadn't gone to school."
Huntington disease affects about 1 in 20,000 people and is
caused by a single gene mutation. Individuals who carry the mutation almost invariably develop the disease unless they die
of some other cause prior to its onset.
Huntington disease is characterized by a progressive loss of cognitive
and physical function and usually begins to manifest itself between the ages of 30 and 50 years. The course of the disease
may last anywhere from 10 to 25 years.
Source: Nurse Health. 2000;23:260-269 |