Division of Medical Genetics, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Department of Genetics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Am J Hum Genet. 2018 Sep 6;103(3):319-327. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.08.007.
The Clinical Sequencing Evidence-Generating Research (CSER) consortium, now in its second funding cycle, is investigating the effectiveness of integrating genomic (exome or genome) sequencing into the clinical care of diverse and medically underserved individuals in a variety of healthcare settings and disease states. The consortium comprises a coordinating center, six funded extramural clinical projects, and an ongoing National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) intramural project. Collectively, these projects aim to enroll and sequence over 6,100 participants in four years. At least 60% of participants will be of non-European ancestry or from underserved settings, with the goal of diversifying the populations that are providing an evidence base for genomic medicine. Five of the six clinical projects are enrolling pediatric patients with various phenotypes. One of these five projects is also enrolling couples whose fetus has a structural anomaly, and the sixth project is enrolling adults at risk for hereditary cancer. The ongoing NHGRI intramural project has enrolled primarily healthy adults. Goals of the consortium include assessing the clinical utility of genomic sequencing, exploring medical follow up and cascade testing of relatives, and evaluating patient-provider-laboratory level interactions that influence the use of this technology. The findings from the CSER consortium will offer patients, healthcare systems, and policymakers a clearer understanding of the opportunities and challenges of providing genomic medicine in diverse populations and settings, and contribute evidence toward developing best practices for the delivery of clinically useful and cost-effective genomic sequencing in diverse healthcare settings.
临床测序证据生成研究 (CSER) 联盟目前正在进行第二个资助周期的研究,旨在调查将基因组 (外显子组或全基因组) 测序整合到各种医疗环境和疾病状态下的多样化和医疗服务不足的个体的临床护理中的效果。该联盟由一个协调中心、六个资助的外部临床项目和一个正在进行的国立人类基因组研究所 (NHGRI) 内部项目组成。这些项目旨在在四年内招募和测序超过 6100 名参与者。至少 60%的参与者将是非欧洲血统或来自服务不足的环境,目标是使提供基因组医学证据基础的人群多样化。六个临床项目中的五个正在招募具有各种表型的儿科患者。其中一个项目还招募了胎儿有结构异常的夫妇,第六个项目则招募了有遗传性癌症风险的成年人。正在进行的 NHGRI 内部项目主要招募了健康成年人。该联盟的目标包括评估基因组测序的临床效用,探索对亲属的医疗随访和级联测试,以及评估影响该技术使用的患者-提供者-实验室层面的相互作用。CSER 联盟的研究结果将使患者、医疗保健系统和政策制定者更清楚地了解在不同人群和环境中提供基因组医学的机会和挑战,并为在不同医疗保健环境中提供具有临床实用性和成本效益的基因组测序的最佳实践提供证据。