| Literature DB >> 24926413 |
Kevin Sweet1, Erynn S Gordon2, Amy C Sturm1, Tara J Schmidlen3, Kandamurugu Manickam1, Amanda Ewart Toland4, Margaret A Keller5, Catharine B Stack6, J Felipe García-España3, Mark Bellafante3, Neeraj Tayal7, Peter Embi8, Philip Binkley9, Ray E Hershberger10, Wolfgang Sadee11, Michael Christman3, Clay Marsh12.
Abstract
We describe the development and implementation of a randomized controlled trial to investigate the impact of genomic counseling on a cohort of patients with heart failure (HF) or hypertension (HTN), managed at a large academic medical center, the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center (OSUWMC). Our study is built upon the existing Coriell Personalized Medicine Collaborative (CPMC®). OSUWMC patient participants with chronic disease (CD) receive eight actionable complex disease and one pharmacogenomic test report through the CPMC® web portal. Participants are randomized to either the in-person post-test genomic counseling-active arm, versus web-based only return of results-control arm. Study-specific surveys measure: (1) change in risk perception; (2) knowledge retention; (3) perceived personal control; (4) health behavior change; and, for the active arm (5), overall satisfaction with genomic counseling. This ongoing partnership has spurred creation of both infrastructure and procedures necessary for the implementation of genomics and genomic counseling in clinical care and clinical research. This included creation of a comprehensive informed consent document and processes for prospective return of actionable results for multiple complex diseases and pharmacogenomics (PGx) through a web portal, and integration of genomic data files and clinical decision support into an EPIC-based electronic medical record. We present this partnership, the infrastructure, genomic counseling approach, and the challenges that arose in the design and conduct of this ongoing trial to inform subsequent collaborative efforts and best genomic counseling practices.Entities:
Keywords: actionable; counseling; genomics; implementation; medicine; patients; pharmacogenomics; randomized; risk perception
Year: 2014 PMID: 24926413 PMCID: PMC4051230 DOI: 10.3390/jpm4010001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Study schema.
Initial results: health conditions and relative risk based on SNP variant result.
| Health Condition | SNP | Reference Genotype (RR) | Heterozygote (RR) | Homozygote (RR) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 Diabetes | rs9272346 | GG (0.08) | GA (0.3) | AA (1.0) |
| Type 2 Diabetes | rs7754840 | GG (1.0) | GC (1.2) | CC (1.3) |
| Hemochromatosis | rs1800562 | GG (1.0) | AG (1.0) * | AA ** |
| Systemic Lupus | rs3821236 | GG (1.0) | AG (1.4) | AA (2.0) |
| Coronary Artery | rs1333049 | GG (1.0) | GC (1.3) | CC (1.7) |
| Prostate Cancer *** | rs16901979 | CC (1.0) | CA (1.5) | AA (1.5) |
| Skin Melanoma | rs910873 | CC (1.0) | CT (1.7) | TT (3.0) |
| Age Related | rs10490924 | GG (1.0) | GT (2.4) | TT (6.0) |
RR is relative risk; * Males Only, lifetime risk 4%; ** Males with 2 copies of the risk variant (AA) are 27 times as likely to develop hemochromatosis RR = 27 (lifetime risk 57%). Females with GG or GA result have no relative risk provided, but are told they have up to a 1% lifetime risk. Females with AA result have no relative risk provided but are told they have a 16% lifetime risk of developing hemochromatosis; *** Both male and female participants receive result report, with risk only applicable to male participants.
Additional Coriell Personalized Medicine Collaborative (CPMC®) approved health conditions for prospective release.
| Health Condition |
|---|
|
Breast Cancer Colorectal Cancer Ulcerative Colitis Crohn’s Disease Obesity Rheumatoid Arthritis Testicular Cancer Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Bladder Cancer Celiac Disease Lung Cancer Osteoporosis Asthma Osteoarthritis Multiple Sclerosis Intracranial Aneurysm Exocrine Pancreatic Cancer Ischemic Stroke |
Additional CPMC® approved drug-gene pairs for prospective release.
| Drug-Gene Pairs |
|---|
|
CYP2C19/PPIs SLCO1B1/Simvastatin CYP2C9/Celecoxib TPMT/Thiopurines CYP2C9/Warfarin VKORC1/Warfarin CYP4F2/Warfarin CYP2D6/Codeine ATM/Metformin IL28A, IL28B, ITPA and Interferon/Ribavirin CYP2D6&CYP2C19/Amitriptyline/Nortriptyline CYP2D6/Paroxetin |
Figure 2Sample CPMC® coronary artery disease report.
Figure 3Sample patient risk summary research report.
Cohort characteristics (n = 210).
| Characteristic | N |
|---|---|
| 58.1 | |
| Male | 117 |
| Female | 93 |
| Caucasian | 187 |
| African American | 16 |
| Native American | 1 |
| Mixed | 5 |
| Do not want to answer | 1 |
| <High School | 3 |
| High school | 17 |
| Vocational school | 1 |
| Some college | 45 |
| Associate degree | 26 |
| Bachelor degree | 50 |
| Graduate degree | 68 |