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Decision Support for Parents Receiving Information About Child's Rare Disease

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clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT01875640
Is a
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Clinical study
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Clinical Study attributes

NCT Number
NCT018756400
Health Conditions in Trial
Hypospadias
Hypospadias
0
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Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
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Trial Recruitment Size
630
Trial Sponsor
University of Michigan
University of Michigan
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Trial Collaborator
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
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Temple University
Temple University
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University of California, Los Angeles
University of California, Los Angeles
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Virginia Commonwealth University
Virginia Commonwealth University
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Clinical Trial Start Date
2013
0
Primary Completion Date
2016
0
Study Completion Date
2017
0
Clinical Trial Study Type
Observational0
Observational Clinical Trial Type
Other0
Observational Study Perspective
Prospective0
Participating Facility
University of Michigan
University of Michigan
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Temple University
Temple University
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Official Name
Decision Support for Parents Receiving Information About Child's Rare Disease0
Last Updated
February 20, 2018
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Study summary

The birth of a child with a disorder of sex development (DSD) is stressful for parents and members of the healthcare team. The "right" decisions about gender assignment (is it a boy? a girl?) and the best course of action (e.g., should there be surgery? what kind? when?) are not obvious. While there have been large advances in diagnostic assessments like genetic and endocrine testing, the tests do not always show what caused the DSD. And, even when the tests do reveal an explanation for the DSD, knowing what happened genetically or hormonally does not usually lead to a single "correct" treatment plan. Instead, it is likely that there are different acceptable treatment options - and parents will need to make decisions based, in part, on their personal preferences, values, and cultural background. Adding more stress to the situation is knowledge that many of the decisions that need to be made by parents early in a child's life are irreversible and exert life-long consequences for the child and the family. To support parents becoming actively involved in making such decisions, and to reduce the likelihood of future worry and regret about decisions that have been made, the investigators will create a decision support tool (DST). The DST will help educate families about typical and atypical sex development of the body, the process by which DSD are diagnosed (especially how to interpret genetic test results), and possible relationships between diagnostic/genetic testing, decisions about care, and known consequences of those decisions on their child and entire family. The DST will be used by parents of young children together with their child's health care provider. The investigators will bring together a network of researchers, health care providers, representatives of patient support and advocacy organizations, and parents of children with DSD to share their experiences. Participants of this network will be involved at each stage of creating the DST, revising it, and putting it into practice. At the end of this project, the investigators will have a fully formed DST that will be available for parents to use with their child's healthcare team as they are first learning their child may have a DSD.

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