4.5 Article

Facilitators and Barriers to the Adoption of Pharmacogenetic Testing in an Inner-City Population

期刊

PHARMACOTHERAPY
卷 38, 期 2, 页码 205-216

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/phar.2077

关键词

barriers; facilitators; pharmacogenetics; pharmacogenetics adoption; pharmacogenetics implementation; pharmacogenetics testing; pharmacogenetics in practice; inner-city population; minorities

资金

  1. Office of Vice President for Health Affairs
  2. American Society of Health System Pharmacists Research and Education Foundation, Medication Use Safety Excellence Award
  3. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health [K23HL112908]
  4. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities [U54MD010723]
  5. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [TR-14-009 1U54TR001347]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

ObjectivesTo examine the knowledge, attitudes, and interest of an inner-city population toward pharmacogenetic testing, with the primary objective of identifying facilitators and barriers toward pharmacogenetic testing; and secondary objectives of determining predictors of patient interest in pharmacogenetic testing and how much patients would pay for the test. MethodsPatients were recruited from an Antithrombosis Clinic from March to April 2014. A cross-sectional 19-question survey was administered in person to determine patients' knowledge and awareness of pharmacogenetic testing and collect demographic information. After explaining pharmacogenetics, patients ranked their interest toward the test and answered open-ended questions that elicited facilitators and barriers toward pharmacogenetic testing and elucidated how much patients would pay for testing. ResultsA total of 120 patients (mean age 55.0 14.0 years, 39.2% male, 69.2% African American) were surveyed. Facilitators included providing further information about pharmacogenetic testing; elaborating on benefits of testing to predict treatment efficacy; patients' trust in their providers to make correct genotype-guided prescribing decisions; and insurance coverage and test affordability. Barriers to testing included concerns about the negative consequences associated with test results; burden of the testing process; perceived lack of utility among elderly and those whose medications were working; privacy issues; and concerns regarding insurance coverage and test affordability. Women had 4.2 times higher adjusted odds of being interested in pharmacogenetic testing. Almost half (44.4%) of the patients with high interest in the test were willing to pay $20 or more, whereas 76.2% of patients with low interest wanted testing at no cost. ConclusionThis study identified facilitators, such as providing additional pharmacogenetic test information, and barriers, such as perceived negative impact of the results and test utility, as issues to address when engaging an urban, largely minority population in pharmacogenetic testing. Female sex was a predictor of interest toward pharmacogenetic testing. These facilitators and barriers should be taken into consideration as pharmacogenetic testing gains widespread utility among inner-city populations.

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