Genetic testing of patients with inherited retinal diseases in the European countries. An international survey by the European Vision Institute
Genetic testing of patients with inherited retinal diseases in the European countries. An international survey by the European Vision Institute
Introduction: the purpose of this project was to explore the current standards of clinical care genetic testing and counseling for patients with inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) from the perspective of leading experts in selected European countries. Also, to gather opinions on current bottlenecks and future solutions to improve patient care.
Methods: on the initiative of the European Vision Institute, a survey questionnaire with 41 questions was designed and sent to experts in the field from ten European countries. Each participant was asked to answer with reference to the situation in their own country.
Results: sixteen questionnaires were collected by November 2023. IRD genetic tests are performed in clinical care settings for 80% or more of tested patients in 9 countries, and the costs of genetic tests in clinical care are covered by the public health service to the extent of 90% or more in 8 countries. The median proportion of patients who are genetically tested, the median rate of genetically solved patients among those who are tested, and the median proportion of patients receiving counseling are 51-70%, 61-80% and 61-80%, respectively. Improving the education of healthcare professionals who facilitate patient referrals to specialised centres, improving access of patients to more thorough genotyping, and increasing the number of available counselors were the most advocated solutions.
Conclusion: there is a significant proportion of IRD patients who are not genetically tested, whose genetic testing is inconclusive, or who do not receive counseling. Educational programs, greater availability of state-of-the-art genotyping and genetic counselors could improve healthcare for IRD patients.
Calzetti, Giacomo
a709b4b9-9caa-47d9-b04c-c1d33582faaf
Schwarzwälder, Kerstin
e45da570-f565-46fa-94f5-7d129438fd20
Ottonelli, Giorgia
d0a6329a-9bf0-4e2e-8b0a-f27a0dd86941
Lotery, Andrew
5ecc2d2d-d0b4-468f-ad2c-df7156f8e514
Calzetti, Giacomo
a709b4b9-9caa-47d9-b04c-c1d33582faaf
Schwarzwälder, Kerstin
e45da570-f565-46fa-94f5-7d129438fd20
Ottonelli, Giorgia
d0a6329a-9bf0-4e2e-8b0a-f27a0dd86941
Lotery, Andrew
5ecc2d2d-d0b4-468f-ad2c-df7156f8e514
Calzetti, Giacomo, Schwarzwälder, Kerstin and Ottonelli, Giorgia
,
et al.
(2024)
Genetic testing of patients with inherited retinal diseases in the European countries. An international survey by the European Vision Institute.
Ophthalmic research.
Abstract
Introduction: the purpose of this project was to explore the current standards of clinical care genetic testing and counseling for patients with inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) from the perspective of leading experts in selected European countries. Also, to gather opinions on current bottlenecks and future solutions to improve patient care.
Methods: on the initiative of the European Vision Institute, a survey questionnaire with 41 questions was designed and sent to experts in the field from ten European countries. Each participant was asked to answer with reference to the situation in their own country.
Results: sixteen questionnaires were collected by November 2023. IRD genetic tests are performed in clinical care settings for 80% or more of tested patients in 9 countries, and the costs of genetic tests in clinical care are covered by the public health service to the extent of 90% or more in 8 countries. The median proportion of patients who are genetically tested, the median rate of genetically solved patients among those who are tested, and the median proportion of patients receiving counseling are 51-70%, 61-80% and 61-80%, respectively. Improving the education of healthcare professionals who facilitate patient referrals to specialised centres, improving access of patients to more thorough genotyping, and increasing the number of available counselors were the most advocated solutions.
Conclusion: there is a significant proportion of IRD patients who are not genetically tested, whose genetic testing is inconclusive, or who do not receive counseling. Educational programs, greater availability of state-of-the-art genotyping and genetic counselors could improve healthcare for IRD patients.
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In preparation date: 12 July 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 493544
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493544
ISSN: 0030-3747
PURE UUID: ea77faf2-159c-42a3-adfa-cd511b4d197f
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Date deposited: 05 Sep 2024 17:13
Last modified: 06 Sep 2024 01:38
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Author:
Giacomo Calzetti
Author:
Kerstin Schwarzwälder
Author:
Giorgia Ottonelli
Corporate Author: et al.
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