| Literature DB >> 26110578 |
Erica A Bowton1, Sarah P Collier2, Xiaoming Wang3, Cara B Sutcliffe4, Sara L Van Driest5, Lindsay J Couch6, Miguel Herrera7, Rebecca N Jerome8, Robbert J C Slebos9,10, William E Alborn11,12, Daniel C Liebler13,14, Candace D McNaughton15, Ray L Mernaugh16, Quinn S Wells17,18, Nancy J Brown19, Dan M Roden20, Jill M Pulley21.
Abstract
Biobank development and integration with clinical data from electronic medical record (EMR) databases have enabled recent strides in genomic research and personalized medicine. BioVU, Vanderbilt's DNA biorepository linked to de-identified clinical EMRs, has proven fruitful in its capacity to extensively appeal to numerous areas of biomedical and clinical research, supporting the discovery of genotype-phenotype interactions. Expanding on experiences in BioVU creation and development, we have recently embarked on a parallel effort to collect plasma in addition to DNA from blood specimens leftover after routine clinical testing at Vanderbilt. This initiative offers expanded utility of BioVU by combining proteomic and metabolomic approaches with genomics and/or clinical outcomes, widening the breadth for potential research and subsequent future impact on clinical care. Here, we describe the considerations and components involved in implementing a plasma biobank program from a feasibility assessment through pilot sample collection.Entities:
Keywords: BioVU; biobanking; biorepository; plasma; proteomics
Year: 2015 PMID: 26110578 PMCID: PMC4493492 DOI: 10.3390/jpm5020140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1BioVU plasma biobanking is supported by existing DNA and EMR de-identification infrastructure. Leftover blood samples are scanned and queried against a database for BioVU DNA biobanking eligibility. Should DNA be already banked, the sample is considered for phenotypic plasma extraction. Both DNA and plasma are linked to their EMR through scrubbing by a secure one-way hash algorithm. Samples and records are linked via a de-identified research identifier.
Volume of leftover blood samples per month. Leftover blood samples are scanned daily to determine BioVU DNA biobanking eligibility. Samples from subjects who already have DNA samples banked (duplicate samples) are eligible for plasma biobanking. The number of blood samples are represented as the mean, median and standard deviation per month since 2006 through 2014.
| Mean | Standard Deviation | Median | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total scanned samples | 35,519 | 5,527 | 36,409 |
| Total duplicate samples scanned | 11,165 | 2,063 | 11,437 |
Figure 2Schema of BioVU plasma bioinformatics processes and procedures. BioVU plasma collection requires the integration of three main data infrastructures. Daily plasma phenotypes are run against an identified database to identify eligible subjects who meet pre-defined clinical criteria. This information is then incorporated into the de-identified database, and only those subjects who already have a DNA sample banked are flagged for plasma collection.
Figure 3Example timeline of DNA and plasma parallel collection. BioVU DNA banking occurs in a defined moment in the medical timeline of a patient. DNA acquisition may be before, after or during diagnosis of a particular disease state. In contrast, phenotypic events trigger specific plasma collection, opening the possibility for observation throughout the varying phases of their clinical care.
Figure A1The sample plasma phenotype demonstrates clinical criteria used to define eligible samples in real time.