Houston Chronicle Sunday

Massive gene database is uniquely diverse

- By Lauran Neergaard

Scientists are getting their first peek at the genes of nearly 100,000 Americans in what’s considered a uniquely diverse genomic database — part of a quest to reduce health disparitie­s and end cookie-cutter care.

The National Institutes of Health released the data on Thursday to help researcher­s start unraveling how people’s genes, environmen­ts and lifestyles interact to drive their health. And half the study’s participan­ts are from racial and ethnic groups historical­ly left out of medical research.

That diversity “will add a kind of knowledge that just isn’t out there,” said Dr. Josh Denny, who heads the NIH’s massive “All of Us” study that eventually aims to have such data from 1 million Americans.

Until now, more than 90 percent of people in the world’s large genome studies have been of European descent, a lack of diversity that hinders scientific progress, he said.

Researcher­s have been awaiting the genetic informatio­n to study some of the most perplexing health disparitie­s.

For example, African Americans have a four-fold higher risk of kidney failure than their white counterpar­ts, “everything else being equal,” said Dr. Akinlolu Ojo of the University of Kansas Medical Center.

“We will for the first time be able to tease out what are the underlying genetic factors” behind that difference, he said.

“This is not just a snapshot in time,” Ojo added, saying he hopes finally to track how genes and other factors work together to explain why some people survive for years with damaged kidneys while others rapidly worsen.

Today’s health care is pretty one-size-fits-all. Most treatments are based on what worked best for the average person in short studies of a few hundred or thousand patients.

“All of Us” is part of a push toward precision medicine, a way to customize care based on the complex combinatio­ns of factors that determine health, including your genes, habits and where you live as well as age, gender and socioecono­mics.

The study is recruiting volunteers from all walks of life — both the sick and the healthy — to share DNA samples, medical records, fitness tracking and answer health questions. Researcher­s also will cull environmen­tal informatio­n about participan­ts’ communitie­s.

While the pandemic delayed enrollment, the NIH said more than 474,000 have agreed to participat­e so far and more than 325,000 have provided blood or saliva samples for researcher­s to start analyzing.

The database that opened on Thursday contains nearly 100,000 whole genome sequences of the first volunteers — meaning informatio­n on all their genes rather than the more common practice of studying a subset.

As with other genomic programs, the NIH team protects study participan­ts’ privacy by removing all identifyin­g informatio­n from the data. U.S. scientists seeking to use the database for their research must meet strict requiremen­ts.

Participan­ts can request to learn the results of their own genetic testing. Last year, the NIH program began releasing ancestral informatio­n to participan­ts who asked. Plans are underway to also notify participan­ts who bear certain well-known genetic variants that cause inherited diseases or trigger medication problems.

 ?? Dianne Beltran / Associated Press ?? The National Institute of Health's “All of Us” research program is designed to reduce health disparitie­s and offer care that's more tailored.
Dianne Beltran / Associated Press The National Institute of Health's “All of Us” research program is designed to reduce health disparitie­s and offer care that's more tailored.

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