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COVID-19 patients can help research via DNA testing sites

- By Darcel Rockett Chicago Tribune

DNA testing companies like Ancestry.com and 23andMe are using their expertise in the fight against COVID-19. Ancestry.com’s study is available only to its members, but 23andMe is asking past and present COVID-19 patients (customers or not) to take part in a study that will contribute to research on the new coronaviru­s.

23andMe asked existing customers in April if they would allow their DNA sample to be used for research aimed at determinin­g if there are genetic factors affecting immune response to the virus.

Then the company opened the study to include non-23andMe customers who had been hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19.

According to Adam Auton, principal scientist at 23andMe and lead researcher on the study, the testing company is hoping research will offer insight into difference­s in risk among individual­s, and help academic and scientific communitie­s in their efforts to treat the illness.

“When the pandemic was getting going, we here at 23andMe were beginning to think through what could we do to really try and help and contribute to the science and understand­ing of this disease,” he said. “Given that we have a very large cohort of people who have had their genomes genotyped, we really felt that we might be able to make an impact on the question of why do some people get very, very sick with a COVID infection whereas other people may have not even noticed that they had an infection at all? And given our expertise in genetics, we wanted to ask the question to what extent genetics plays a role in those outcomes.”

Auton said the response has been a positive one. He said hundreds of thousands of people already have completed the survey to participat­e in the genome study, and of those, over 9,000 individual­s said they have tested positive for COVID-19. Auton is hoping more participan­ts join the study to get a wider spectrum of coronaviru­s experience­s. To join, individual­s have to be over 18, live in the United States, be willing to provide a saliva sample for analyzing different parts of your genome, be willing to complete online study surveys, must have tested positive for COVID-19 and must have been hospitaliz­ed due to COVID-19 symptoms. Those who qualify will receive the 23andMe Health + Ancestry Service at no cost.

Judy Schneider, 75, did a 23andMe kit almost 10 years ago. Having rebounded from a COVID-19 diagnosis in March, she was excited to hear about the 23andMe study.

“I would participat­e because I’m interested from the point of view that I have asthma and my mother had asthma,” she said. “I’m concerned about being reinfected, so I would participat­e.”

Ashantis Jones, 26, did a 23andMe kit with her family two Christmase­s ago. But she said she wouldn’t add her genome informatio­n to the COVID-19 study.

“There’s a cultural implicatio­n especially around people of color because we’ve been tested on since America has become America,” she said. “So there is a historical context, too, so no. You’re not just going to take my stuff and test. It just starts to get a little bit too Big Brother.”

Auton says 23andMe wants to be as transparen­t as possible with the study, so the study’s protocols are overseen by a thirdparty ethical review board.

“I think it’s super important to emphasize that all of the research that we do is entirely opt-in,” Auton said. “They can withdraw their consent at any point, and we will stop using their data. We really are very conscious of this. … Frankly, we know we couldn’t do this research without our participan­ts, so we’re just extremely grateful to those that have chosen to participat­e.”

Preliminar­y data shows a variant in the ABO gene (which is associated with blood type) linked to a lower risk, when comparing research participan­ts who reported that they tested positive for COVID-19 with those who tested negative. Auton said data collection will continue through the summer.

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