| Literature DB >> 29263844 |
Brett Doble1,2, Deborah J Schofield1,3,4, Tony Roscioli5, John S Mattick1,6.
Abstract
The clinical translation of genomic sequencing is hampered by the limited information available to guide investment into those areas where genomics is well placed to deliver improved health and economic outcomes. To date, genomic medicine has achieved its greatest successes through applications to diseases that have a high genotype-phenotype correlation and high penetrance, with a near certainty that the individual will develop the condition in the presence of the genotype. It has been anticipated that genomics will play an important role in promoting population health by targeting at-risk individuals and reducing the incidence of highly prevalent, costly, complex diseases, with potential applications across screening, prevention, and treatment decisions. However, where primary or secondary prevention requires behavioural changes, there is currently very little evidence to support reduction in disease incidence. A better understanding of the relationship between genomic variation and complex diseases will be necessary before effective genomic risk identification and management of the risk of complex diseases in healthy individuals can be carried out in clinical practice. Our recommended approach is that priority for genomic testing should focus on diseases where there is strong genotype-phenotype correlation, high or certain penetrance, the effects of the disease are serious and near-term, there is the potential for prevention and/or treatment, and the net costs incurred are acceptable for the health gains achieved.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29263844 PMCID: PMC5698310 DOI: 10.1038/s41525-017-0037-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Genom Med ISSN: 2056-7944 Impact factor: 8.617
Nomenclature and definitions
| Personalised medicine—“the tailoring of medical treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient”[ |
| Precision medicine—“an approach to disease treatment and prevention that seeks to maximise effectiveness by taking into account individual variability in genes, environment, and lifestyle”[ |
| Stratified medicine—“the grouping of patients according to disease risk or likely treatment response, as determined by diagnostic tests, to determine the course of care”36 This term is most commonly used within the UK |
| Genomic medicine—“the use of genomic information and technologies (e.g., genomic sequencing, which includes whole genome and exome sequencing and multi-gene panels) to determine disease risk and predisposition, diagnosis and prognosis, and the selection and prioritisation of therapeutic options”[ |
| Genomic sequencing—includes the use of whole genome sequencing, whole exome sequencing and gene panels |
| Pharmacogenomics—“a polygenic or genome-wide approach to identifying genetic determinants of drug response, capitalising on information from the Human Genome Project and on advances in technology”37 |
Reduction of the incidence of expensive diseases with genetic information
| Disease | Incidence | Intervention | Reduction in incidencea,b | Lifetime per patient direct medical costs of disease (USD 2016)c,d | Annual direct medical costs of disease incurred by health system (USD 2016)c,e,f |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phenylketonuria (PKU) | 1/10,00038 | Dietary treatment with a phenylalanine restricted diet | 92%[ | $32,930/patient (up to 36 years of life)39 | — |
| β-thalassemia major | 1/100,00038 | Reproductive planning | 90%[ | $1,370,182/patient (60 year lifespan)40 | — |
| Cystic fibrosis (CF) | 1/8,000 to 1/10,00038 | Reproductive planning | 65%[ | $511,961/patient (28 year lifespan)41 | — |
| Fragile X syndrome (FXS) | 1/4,000 to 1/5,00038 | Reproductive planning | 47%[ | $679,469/patient (72 year lifespan)42 | — |
| Familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) | 1/500 for heterozygous dominantly inherited; 1/1,000,000 for homozygous autosomal recessive inherited38 | Prophylactic statin therapy | 51%[ | — | $2,931,345,62243 (per annum) |
| Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) | 2,216,000 hospitalised patients in the US had serious ADRs; 106,000 had fatal ADRs44 1/16 hospitalisations in the UK are a result of ADRs45 | Informed prescribing | 17% (4–30%)[ | — | $242,392,437,33046 (per annum) |
a For PKU percentage refers to the reduction in PKU patients with low IQ (<90)
b For FH percentage refers to the reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with homozygous FH after receiving lipid-lowering therapy
c All costs were inflated to 2016 prices using country-specific (United Kingdom or United States) OECD all items non-food, non-energy Consumer Price Indexes (http://stats.oecd.org/Index.aspx?DatasetCode=MEI_PRICES) and converted to United States dollars (1 GBP = 1.29 USD) as to report all costs in a common currency and year
d For PKU the cost refers to the per-patient lifetime direct medical costs of a PKU patient that does not receive a phenylalanine restricted diet, thereby representing the direct medical costs of not identifying an individual with PKU
e For FH the cost refers to the annual medical costs of coronary heart disease across all of the United Kingdom, which highlights the magnitude of the direct medical costs that are associated with the condition. The argument being, if prophylactic statin therapy were used in all individuals identified to have either heterozygous or homozygous FH through genomic sequencing, a 51% reduction in the incidence of major cardiovascular events would therefore result in large savings to health care systems in terms of direct medical costs
f For ADRs the cost refers to the annual medical costs of drug-related morbidity and mortality in the United States, which highlights the magnitude of the direct medical costs that are associated with ADRs. Even a modest reduction of 17% in the incidence of these events through more informed prescribing after genomic testing would therefore result in large savings to health care systems in terms of direct medical costs
Fig. 1Framework for distinguishing applications of genomics likely to have demonstrable value