Summary
We investigated the psychological impact of testing for the presence of thrombophilic
alterations. The enrolled subjects received counseling from a physician before blood
sampling and after receiving results, with a view to provide clear information about
the aim of thrombophilia screening (TS). Participants were requested to completea
pre-test questionnaire during this interview and a post-test questionnaire 20 days
after receiving theTS results. One hundred ninety-seven subjects completed the pre-test
questionnaire and 140/197 (71.1%) returned the post-test one. The TS results were
altered in 36 (25.7%, R506Q mutation n=19; G20210A mutation n=9; antithrombin deficiency
n=1; LAC phenomenon n=4; hyperhomocysteinemia n=3) and normal in 104 subjects. We
assessed: perceived health status (PHS), state of anxiety, health fears, depressive
reactions, moods, perceived well-being, and perceived daily-life stress. For both
groups, both at pre- and post-test, none of the psychological variable scores showed
significant worsening, regardless of whether TS resulted altered or normal. Anxiety
significantly (p≤0.05) decreased at post-test in the altered group and a nonsignificant
improvement in PHS after TS result communication was recorded in both groups. Age
was an important factor in mediating psychological impact. In conclusion, diagnosis
of thrombophilic alterations seems to be well accepted in the short term and TS should
not be discouraged for potential adverse psychological effects. However, the psychological
impact over a longer period of receiving altered results needs to be further investigated.
The relationship between absence of adverse psychological reactions and quality of
counseling program provided before and after TS should also be investigated.
Keywords
Psychological impact - thrombophilia - screening - risk factors