Public Preferences for Genetic and Genomic Risk-Informed Chronic Disease Screening and Early Detection: A Systematic Review of Discrete Choice Experiments.
Amber SalisburyJoshua CiardiRichard NormanAmelia K SmitAmelia K SmitCynthia LowMichael CaruanaLouisa G GordonKaren CanfellJulia SteinbergAlison M PearcePublished in: Applied health economics and health policy (2024)
The uptake of potential programmes would strongly depend on specific programme features and the disease context. In particular, careful communication of potential survival benefits and likely genetic/genomic test accuracy might encourage uptake of genetic and genomic risk-tailored disease screening programmes. As the majority of the literature focused on high-risk variants and cancer screening, further research is required to understand preferences specific to PRS testing at a population level and targeted genomic testing for different disease contexts.