Fiatal Szilvia, Ádány Róza
Department of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary.
WHO Collaborating Centre on Vulnerability and Health, Department of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Public Health, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary.
Front Public Health. 2018 Jan 31;5:358. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00358. eCollection 2017.
Although largely preventable, cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the biggest cause of death worldwide. Common complex cardiovascular disorders (e.g., coronary heart disease, hypertonia, or thrombophilia) result from a combination of genetic alterations and environmental factors. Recent advances in the genomics of CVDs have fostered huge expectations about future use of susceptibility variants for prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Our aim was to summarize the latest developments in the field from a public health perspective focusing on the applicability of data on single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), through a systematic review of studies from the last decade on genetic risk estimating for common CVDs.
Several keywords were used for searching the PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, and Web of Science databases. Recent advances were summarized and structured according to the main public health domains (prevention, early detection, and treatment) using a framework suggested recently for translational research. This framework includes four recommended phases: "T1. From gene discovery to candidate health applications; T2. From health application to evidence-based practice guidelines; T3. From evidence-based practice guidelines to health practice; and T4. From practice to population health impacts."
The majority of translation research belongs to the T1 phase "translation of basic genetic/genomic research into health application"; there are only a few population-based impacts estimated. The studies suggest that an SNP is a poor estimator of individual risk, whereas an individual's genetic profile combined with non-genetic risk factors may better predict CVD risk among certain patient subgroups. Further research is needed to validate whether these genomic profiles can prospectively identify individuals at risk to develop CVDs. Several research gaps were identified: little information is available on studies suggesting "Health application to evidence-based practice guidelines"; no study is available on "Guidelines to health practice." It was not possible to identify studies that incorporate environmental or lifestyle factors in the risk estimation.
Currently, identifying populations having a larger risk of developing common CVDs may result in personalized prevention programs by reducing people's risk of onset or disease progression. However, limited evidence is available on the application of genomic results in health and public health practice.
心血管疾病(CVDs)虽然在很大程度上是可预防的,但却是全球最大的死因。常见的复杂心血管疾病(如冠心病、高血压或血栓形成倾向)是由基因改变和环境因素共同导致的。心血管疾病基因组学的最新进展引发了人们对未来利用易感性变异进行预防、诊断和治疗的巨大期望。我们的目的是从公共卫生角度总结该领域的最新进展,重点关注单核苷酸多态性(SNP)数据的适用性,通过对过去十年关于常见心血管疾病遗传风险评估的研究进行系统综述。
使用了几个关键词来搜索PubMed、Embase、CINAHL和Web of Science数据库。根据最近为转化研究建议的框架,按照主要公共卫生领域(预防、早期检测和治疗)对最新进展进行了总结和结构化。该框架包括四个推荐阶段:“T1. 从基因发现到候选健康应用;T2. 从健康应用到循证实践指南;T3. 从循证实践指南到健康实践;以及T4. 从实践到人群健康影响。”
大多数转化研究属于T1阶段“将基础遗传/基因组研究转化为健康应用”;仅有少数基于人群的影响评估。研究表明,单核苷酸多态性对个体风险的估计效果不佳,而个体的基因图谱与非遗传风险因素相结合可能能更好地预测某些患者亚组中的心血管疾病风险。需要进一步研究来验证这些基因组图谱是否能够前瞻性地识别有患心血管疾病风险的个体。确定了几个研究空白:关于“从健康应用到循证实践指南”的研究信息很少;没有关于“从指南到健康实践”的研究。无法确定在风险评估中纳入环境或生活方式因素的研究。
目前,识别患常见心血管疾病风险较高的人群可能会通过降低人们发病或疾病进展的风险,从而制定个性化的预防方案。然而,关于基因组结果在健康和公共卫生实践中的应用的证据有限。