Santa Fe New Mexican

National DNA study begins to share gene findings with volunteers

- By Lauran Neergaard

More than 155,000 Americans who shared their DNA for science are about to learn something in return: Do they have some particular­ly worrisome genes?

It’s part of a massive project to unravel how people’s genetics, environmen­ts and habits interact to determine their overall health. The National Institutes of Health said Tuesday it’s now starting to notify participan­ts about some early findings — if they carry variants that can cause any of 59 inherited diseases or trigger medication problems.

Because everyone with the same gene won’t have the same health outcome, sharing those results may spur new discoverie­s.

“What are the drivers in that variabilit­y?” asked Dr. Josh Denny, who heads the NIH’s “All of Us” study. “The way they change their behaviors in response to the findings, we’ll be able to look at that.”

All of Us is an unpreceden­ted effort to reduce health disparitie­s and end today’s one-size-fitsall care. Researcher­s aim to track 1 million people from all walks of life for at least a decade to better understand the complex combinatio­ns of factors that determine why one sibling gets sick and not another, or why a cure for one patient fails in another.

Volunteers share DNA samples, medical records, fitness tracking and answer health questions. About 560,000 have enrolled so far — importantl­y, nearly half from racial and ethnic groups historical­ly left out of medical research.

Traditiona­lly such studies are a one-way street — scientists learn a lot from volunteers who get little personal informatio­n in return. But in an unusual move, All of Us participan­ts get to decide if they want to learn health-related genetic findings, long before the study’s finished.

“I kind of shudder to think about what could happen if I hadn’t known this,” said Rachele Peterson, an NIH employee participat­ing in the study.

An All of Us genetic counselor broke the news to the Philadelph­ia woman that she was at increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer because of a gene named BRCA-2.

Peterson, who volunteere­d for All of Us before recently becoming the project’s chief of staff, didn’t realize that was a risk for her family.

The knowledge “allows you to take charge,” said Peterson, who plans to discuss options with her own doctor such as increased breast cancer screening or whether to consider precaution­ary ovary removal.

Denny estimated 2 percent to 3 percent of study participan­ts will learn they have a wellknown genetic variant that can cause certain cancers, heart conditions or other disorders. Many more will have genetic variants that affect how their body processes certain medicines.

For now, participan­ts only will be given findings they can do something about, such as seeking earlier diagnosis or switching medication­s. They’ll be offered free confirmato­ry testing, genetic counseling and help with sharing the informatio­n with their physicians and family members.

But there’s a lot more to learn. For example, the vast majority of disease-linked genes were discovered by studying people of European ancestry. Very different variants may play a bigger role for other ancestries, said Baylor College of Medicine genetics expert Eric Venner.

His team is using the diverse All of Us genetic database to start teasing apart which difference­s matter most to which population­s.

If new findings affect study volunteers, “we’re going to keep things up to date,” Denny said. “That’s the power of being able to talk to our participan­ts, partnering with them for potentiall­y decades.”

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