Current Environment:

Summary

The Genomic Sequencing for Childhood Risk and Newborn Illness (the BabySeq Project) is a research study exploring the use of genomic sequencing in newborns. The National Institutes of Health is funding this study. The investigators will enroll 240 healthy infants and their parents from the Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) Well Newborn Nursery and 240 sick infants and their parents at Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) or the BWH Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). A small blood sample will be collected from each infant and genome sequencing may be performed. Six weeks later, results are returned and explained. Over 12 months the investigators are studying the experiences of parents and pediatricians of infants who receive sequencing to help understand how best to use genomics in pediatric care.

Conditions

Hereditary Disease, Genetic Predisposition to Disease

Recruitment Status

Completed

Detailed Description

The objective of this research protocol is to conduct a randomized clinical trial to assess the benefits and risks of adding the information from a genomic sequencing report to physician-mediated medical care of newborns during their pediatric years. The investigators will enroll 240 healthy infants and their parents from the Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) Well Newborn Nursery and 240 sick infants and their parents at Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) or the BWH Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). A small blood sample will be obtained from each enrolled infant. Samples will be collected from all infants enrolled, regardless of the arm to which they are assigned, in order to follow the same protocol for all subjects prior to randomization. Infants within each cohort will be randomized (1:1) to either standard-of-care (family history and standard newborn screening report) or to standard-of-care plus genomic sequencing. A study physician and genetic counselor will disclose the infant's randomization assignment and study results during an in-person consultation with each family. The study physician and genetic counselor will provide the consultation to families utilizing all available medical information. In the sequencing arm of the study, this will include the medical history, physical exam, family history, standard newborn screening (NBS) report and sequencing report(s). In the non-sequencing arm of the study, this will include the medical history, physical exam, family history and standard NBS report. Parents will be surveyed at four points over the 12 months after enrollment: baseline, immediately post-disclosure (approximately 6 weeks after enrollment), 3 months post-disclosure, and at 10 months post-disclosure.

Eligibility Criteria

Newborns and Parents at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) Well Newborn Nursery:

Inclusion Criteria :

Infants born at BWH and admitted to the Well Newborn Nursery
At least one biological parent is physically available to have genetic counseling, donate DNA, and provide consent for testing the infant. If the second biological parent is known but not physically present, the second biological parent must be available to have genetic counseling by phone, return a signed consent form by mail, and donate DNA via a mailed saliva kit. If there is a "rearing parent" (an individual who is not biologically related to the infant, but who is dedicated to raising the child), that individual must also provide consent but will not be asked to submit a saliva sample.
Mother (either rearing or biological) carried the pregnancy

Exclusion Criteria:

Parents are non-English speaking
Parents are unwilling to have genomic reports placed in the medical record or sent to their primary care pediatrician
Mother or father younger than 18 years of age
Mother or father with impaired decisional capacity
Age of infant is older than 30 days
One of a multiple gestation
Any infant in which clinical considerations preclude drawing 1.0 ml of blood
Missing consent of either biological parent (if known) or rearing parent (if applicable)

Sick Newborns and Parents at Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) or the BWH NICU:

Inclusion Criteria:

Infants admitted to BCH or the BWH NICU
At least one biological parent is physically available to have genetic counseling, donate DNA, and provide consent for testing the infant. If the second biological parent is known but not physically present, the second biological parent must be available to have genetic counseling by phone, return a signed consent form by mail, and donate DNA via a mailed saliva kit. If there is a "rearing parent" (an individual who is not biologically related to the infant, but who is dedicated to raising the child), that individual must also provide consent but will not be asked to submit a saliva sample.
Mother (either biological or rearing) carried the pregnancy

Exclusion Criteria:

Parents are non-English speaking
Parents are unwilling to have genomic reports placed in the medical record or sent to their primary care pediatrician
Mother or father younger than 18 years of age
Mother or father with impaired decisional capacity
Age of infant is older than 30 days
One of a multiple gestation
Any infant in which clinical considerations preclude drawing 1.0 ml of blood
Hospital admission expected to be less than 72 hours
Missing consent of either biological parent (if known) or rearing parent (if applicable)
Previously performed exome/genome sequencing on patient

Intervention

Intervention Type

Intervention Name

Genetic

Genomic sequencing

Other

Family history report

Phase

Not Applicable

Gender

All

Min Age

N/A

Max Age

N/A

Download Date

April 3, 2024

Principal Investigator

Robert C. Green, MD, MPH

Primary Contact Information

For more information on this trial, visit clinicaltrials.gov.

Contact

For more information and to contact the study team:

Genomic Sequencing for Childhood Risk and Newborn Illness NCT02422511