| Literature DB >> 35629115 |
Kimberly S Foss1, Julianne M O'Daniel1, Jonathan S Berg1, Sabrina N Powell1, Rosemary Jean Cadigan2, Kristine J Kuczynski2, Laura V Milko1, Katherine W Saylor3, Megan Roberts4, Karen Weck1,5, Gail E Henderson2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Advances in clinical genomic sequencing capabilities, including reduced costs and knowledge gains, have bolstered the consideration of genomic screening in healthy adult populations. Yet, little is known about the existing landscape of genomic screening programs in the United States. It can be difficult to find information on current implementation efforts and best practices, particularly in light of critical questions about equity, cost, and benefit.Entities:
Keywords: genomic testing; population screening; sequencing programs
Year: 2022 PMID: 35629115 PMCID: PMC9145687 DOI: 10.3390/jpm12050692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Recommended 12 questions to be addressed in pilot studies of general population screening used for this study.
| Recommended Question * | Corresponding Category for This Study | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | How should screening be designed to offer inclusive benefits for the whole population (with specific attention to the poor, as well as underrepresented racial and ethnic groups)? | Recruitment/Enrollment |
| 2. | What are the appropriate population characteristics for screening (e.g., age, sex)? | Target Population/ Eligibility |
| 3. | What is the optimal testing strategy/technology (e.g., exome sequencing, multigene panel, single-nucleotide polymorphism array)? | Target Genes |
| 4. | What are the ideal lead institutions for carrying out DNA-based screening (e.g., health care provider organizations, departments of public health, for-profit companies)? | Institution/Setting |
| 5. | How should DNA-based screening (primary screen) be paid for (e.g., government funding, private insurance, self-pay)? | Funding/Cost to Patients |
| 6. | How should clinical follow-up (secondary screen) be paid for (e.g., government funding, private insurance, self-pay)? | Return of Results/Clinical Follow-up |
| 7. | How often should data be reanalyzed (e.g., compared with evolving databases like ClinVar (updated annually))? | Data Reanalyzed |
| 8. | What strategy should be pursued for cascade testing (e.g., should at-risk family members be automatically contacted by health system)? | Cascade Testing |
| 9. | What are the short-term clinical outcomes (e.g., correcting diagnostic misattribution, pre-symptomatic diagnosis of cancer or heart disease)? | Outcomes |
| 10. | What are the long-term clinical outcomes (e.g., nonpenetrance, overdiagnosis)? | Outcomes |
| 11. | What are the best practices regarding negative screening result reporting (critically important to avoid false reassurance)? | Return of Results/Clinical Follow-up |
| 12. | What are the clinical workforce needs related to delivering DNA-based results and clinical follow-up at population scale (i.e., how many medical geneticists, genetic counselors, specialists, others)? | Clinical Workforce |
* Murray MF, Evans JP, Khoury MJ. DNA-based population screening: potential suitability and important knowledge gaps. JAMA. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.18640.
Genomic Screening Programs in 4 Categories.
| Program and Location | System-Wide Program| PCP Enrollment of Patients ( | System-Wide Program|Patients Invited to Pilot Project ( | Statewide Program ( | Screening Offered in a Genetics Clinic ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geisinger MyCode, Danville, PA | X | |||
| University of Vermont The Genomic DNA Test, Burlington, VT | X | |||
| University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) 3D Health, | X | |||
| Sanford Health The Sanford Chip, | X | |||
| Northshore DNA10K, Chicago, IL | X | |||
| Oschner Health innovationOchsner Population Genomic Screening Program, New Orleans, LA | X | |||
| Stanford University Humanwide, Palo Alto, CA | X | |||
| Healthy Nevada Project, Renown Health | X | |||
| Alabama Genomic Health Initiative, UAB Medicine | X | |||
| Brigham & Women’s Hospital Preventive Genomics Clinic, Boston, MA | X | |||
| St. Elizabeth Healthcare Precision Medicine and Genetics, Edgewood, KY | X | |||
| UCSF Preventive Genomics Clinic, San Francisco, CA | X |
Program summaries.
Figure 1Locations of 12 screening programs.
Program Characteristics.
| Program Name | Geisinger | UVM Genomic Population Healthpilot | UCSF 3D Health—Data, Discovery, Diversity | The Sanford Chip DNA Test | Northshore DNA10K | Ochsner Population Genomic Screening | Stanford Humanwide | Healthy Nevada | Alabama Genomic Health Initiative | Brigham Preventive Genomics Clinic | St Elizabeth Precision Medicine and Genetics | UCSF Preventive Genomics Clinic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recruitment ongoing | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Unknown | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Enrollment initiated by | Provider | Provider | Patient and/or Provider | Patient and/orProvider | Provider | Provider | Provider | Patient and/or Provider | Patient | Patient | Patient | Patient and/or Provider |
| Enrollment goal | Unknown | 1000 | 1000 | Unknown | 10,000 | 1000 | 50 | 250,000 | 10,000 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Eligibility | HCS patients | HCS patients | HCS patients | HCS patients | HCS patients (limited number) | HCS patients (limited number) | HCS patients (limited number) | State residents | State residents | No known restrictions | No known restrictions | No known restrictions |
| Inclusion of children | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No |
| Methodology | Sequencing | Sequencing | Sequencing | Genotype Array-Based | Sequencing | Sequencing | Sequencing | Sequencing | Genotype Array-Based | Sequencing | Sequencing | Sequencing |
| Sequencing partner | Commercial | Commercial | Commercial | Internal | Commercial | Commercial | Unknown | Commercial | Commercial | Internal | Commercial | Internal and Commercial |
| Institution | HCS | Academic | Academic | HCS | HCS | HCS | Academic | HCS | Academic | HCS | HCS | Academic |
| Cost to patient | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Reanalysis of data | Yes | Yes | Yes | N/A | Unknown | Yes | Unknown | Unknown | N/A | Yes | Unknown | Yes |
| Cascade testing available | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unknown | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Unknown | Yes |
| Results returned by | GC | PCP | GC | GC/PCP | Patient Portal | Patient Portal | Determined w/patient | GC | GC | GC | GC | GC |
| Year of launch | 2013 | 2019 | 2020 | 2018 | 2019 | 2019 | 2018 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | Unknown | Unknown |
Target Genes.
| Geisinger MyCode | UVM Genomic Population Health Pilot | UCSF 3D Health—Data, Discovery, Diversity | The Sanford Chip DNA Test * | Northshore | Ochsner | Stanford | Healthy Nevada | Alabama Genomic Health Initiative * | Brigham | St. Elizabeth | UCSF Preventive Genomics Clinic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||||||
| CDC tier 1 only | x | x | x | |||||||||
| ACMG version 2 secondary findings | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||||
| Clinical lab proactive panel | x | x | x | |||||||||
| WGS | x | |||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| Carrier status | x | x | x | |||||||||
| Pharmacogenetics | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||||
| Traits/ancestry | x | x | x |
* Array-based testing.