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Application of Genetic Tools to Clinical and Translational Research. Thomas A. Pearson, MD, PhD University of Rochester School of Medicine Visiting Scientist, NHGRI. TAProots Vineyard Keuka Lake, NY. Concord Grapes. One year old French hybrid grapes. Vanessa Seedless Grapes.
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Application of Genetic Tools to Clinical and Translational Research Thomas A. Pearson, MD, PhD University of Rochester School of Medicine Visiting Scientist, NHGRI
Lecture 8. Application of Genetic Tools to Clinical and Translational Research • Examine the basis for inferring that gene variants are causal for a disease. • Consider the use of genetic tools in personalized medicine a. Genetic Screening/susceptibility assessment b. Pharmacogenomics • Discuss the application of genetic tools to future observational and experiential studies.
Contributions of GWAS to Basic Science Genome structure and function Exons, introns Regulatory elements Novel mechanisms of disease Proteins as therapeutics Drug targets • Mass screening of small molecule inhibitors
U.S. Surgeon General’sCriteria for Causal Association • Temporal relationship • Strength of the association • Dose-response relationship • Replication of findings • Biologic plausibility • Consideration of alternate explanations • Cessation of exposure • Consistency with other knowledge • Specificity of the association * Report of the Advisory Committee to the Surgeon General, 1964
GWAS and the U.S. Surgeon General’s Criteria for Causal Association
GWASDemonstrating Risk Per Allele for Breast Cancer* *Easton, DF, et al. Nature 2997; 447: 1087-1093
GWAS and the U.S. Surgeon General’s Criteria for Causal Association (Cont.)
Possible Explanations of Heterogeneity of Results in Genetic Association Studies • Biologic mechanisms • Genetic heterogeneity • Gene-gene interactions • Gene-environment interactions • Spurious mechanisms • Selection bias • Information bias • Publication biasConfounding (population stratification) • Cohort, age, period (secular effects • Type I error
Structure of Human Genes:Potential Sites of Gene Variation • Exons • Introns • Regulatory Elements • Promoters • PolyA Tail • Enhanceers • Silencers • Locus Control Regions
GWAS to Identify Novel Breast Cancer Susceptibility Loci* • Known breast cancer loci explain <25% of familial risk. • Two stage study of 4398 cases and 4316 controls with replication of 30 SNP’s in 21,860 cases and 22,578 controls. • 227,876 SNP’s genotyped. • 5 novel loci related to breast cancer at P<I0-7 explain an additional 3.6% of familial risk. • 1792 additional SNP’s associated at P<.05 with 1343 expected, suggesting many additional susceptibility alleles exist. Easton DF, et al. Nature 2007; 447: 1087-1093
GWAS and the U.S. Surgeon General’s Criteria for Causal Association (Cont.)
Intervention in Children with Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome* • Rare disorder of accelerated aging with death from cardiovascular disease by age 13 years. • Defect is a glycine GGC to glycine GGT in codon 608 of exon 11 of lamin A gene. • Activates a cryptic splice donor to produce an abnormal protein, Lamin A. • Lamin A or progerin cannot release from farnesyl-cysteine tether site on the nuclear membrane and alters transcription. • Farnesyl transferase inhibition prevents anchoring of progerin in fibroblasts and in transgenic mouse models. • Open label clinical trial of inhibition of farnesyl transferase with ABT 100 is underway. *Merideth MA, et. al. NEJM 2008; 358: 592-604
GWAS Identifies Gene Variant rs4430796 Which Confers Risk for Prostate Cancer and Protection from Type 2 Diabetes* *Gundmundsson J, et al. Nat Gen 7/1/07
Personalized Medicine “At its most basic, personalized medicine refers to using information about a person’s genetic make-up to tailor strategies for detection, treatment, and prevention of disease” Francis Collins, Director, NHGRI 7/17/05
Screening of Family Members of Patients Admitted with Coronary Heart Disease • 5620 consecutive patients admitted to 53 randomly selected hospitals for MI, coronary bypass or angioplasty, or unstable angina. • Medical record review of discharge plans. • 37/5620 (0.7%) identified plan to screen first degree relatives. • Follow-up 6 months after discharge • 16% of children screened for risk factors. • Little variance based on risk or risk factors of proband. Swanson JR, Pearson TA. Am J Prev Med 2001; 20:50-55
The U.S. Surgeon General’s Family History Initiative • My Family Health Portrait • Web-based tool to collect and organize family history information https://familyhistory.hhs.gov • Printout for sharing with healthcare providers • National Family History Day (Thanksgiving) • Encourage Americans to talk about and write down health problems running in their family
Some Conditions for Which Newborn Screening Has Been Implemented Nussbaum R. Thompson and Thompson’s Medical Genetics, 2007
Criteria for an Effective Screening Program Analytic Validity Clinical Validity Clinical Utility 1. Condition is frequent to justify cost 2. Detection would otherwise not occur at early enough stage 3. Early treatment prevents morbidity 4. Treatment is available 5. Families and personnel available to perform screening, inform about results, and institute treatment.
Barriers to Application of Genetic Markers to Clinical Preventive Medicine* • Lack of information on how the prevalence and risk contribution of markers varies across population groups. • Limited data on how the inheritance of multiple markers affects an individual’s risk • Little information on how most genetic risk factors interact with environmental factors • Few studies on common diseases that test the effect of interventions on genetic risk factors Faero WG, Guttmarker AE, Collins FS. JAMA 2008; 299
Cost – Effectiveness Trial of New Biomarker Test Patients at Risk For Disease Randomization New Test Usual Care High Risk Low Risk Treatment No Treatment Treatment No Treatment Outcome Measures: Clinical Events, Costs, etc.
Commercial Direct-to-Consumer Genomic Testing* *Offit K. JAMA 2008, 299; 1353-4
BRCA1 and BRCA2:Estimated Lifetime Risk of Cancer* Antoniou, et al. ASHG 2003; 72: 1117
BRCA 1&2 Testing* • Current testing does not identify all genetic risk and explains relatively little of total incidence. • Recommend testing affected relative: if positive, offer to unaffected relatives. • Costs: BRCA 1/2 sequencing ($3200), supplemental testing ($650), test for single known mutation ($350). • Preventive options for BRCA 1/2+ women • Prophylactic surgery • Tamoxifen (may be effective only in BRCA 2) • Early breast screening or breast MRI Burke W, Jackson Laboratory 7/26/08
Delivery of Genomic Medicine for Common Chronic Diseases: A Systematic Review Scheuner MT, et al. JAMA 2008; 299: 1320-1334
GINA: The Genetic Information Non-Discrimination Act 2007-2008 • Prohibits health insurers from requesting or requiring genetic information of an individual or their family members or using it for decisions on coverage, rates, etc. • Includes participation in research that includes genetic services • Prohibits employers from requesting or requiring information or using it in decisions regarding hiring, firing, or terms of employment
Pharmacogenetics: The study of differences in drug response due to allelic variation in genes affecting drug metabolism, efficacy, and toxicity. • Drug metabolism under genetic control • Hydroxylation • Conjugation • Glucuronidation • Acetylation • Methylation • Phenotypes of drug metabolism Normal metabolizers Poor metabolizers Ultrafast metabolizers
Frequency of Slow-Acelylator Phenotype Affecting Isoniazid Metabolism BurroughsVJ, et al., cited in Nussbaum R, Thompson and Thompson’s Genetic Medicine, 2007
Policy for Sharing of Data Obtained in NIH Supported and Conducted GWAS (NOT-OD-07-088) Goal: To make available the genotype and phenotype datasets as rapidly as possible to a wide range of scientific investigators. Components: Data repository (NCBI, dbGAP) Data submission and protection Data access Publication Intellectual property
Investigators Requesting and Receiving GWAS Data • Submit a description of proposed research project • Submit a data access request, co-signed by Institutional Official • Protect data confidentiality • Ensure data security measures are in place • Notify appropriate Data Access Committee of policy violations, if any • Submit annual reports on research findings
Conclusions • Evidence for the causal association of gene polymorphisms in common chronic diseases is still in formative stages • Application of products of genomics research such as susceptibility assessment and pharmacogenomics holds promise but barriers persist • Technologies are currently being marketed to consumers • Survey evidence suggesting low level of genetic knowledge in consumers and low levels of skills in providers • Genome research has been a boom for basic scientists; clinical investigators should ready themselves to participate in this developing field
Sample Collection and Processing • Obtaining samples for DNA preparation • Blood • Buccal cells • Serum • Pathology specimens • Other? • Purifyign and quantifying DNA • Whole genome amplification (WGA) • Trace individual DNAs (QC) Courtesy S. Chanock, NCi