Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Shock. 2020 Mar;53(3):256-268. doi: 10.1097/SHK.0000000000001409.
Acute illness is a complex constellation of responses involving dysregulated inflammatory and immune responses, which are ultimately associated with multiple organ dysfunction. Gene association studies have associated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with clinical and pharmacological outcomes in a variety of disease states, including acute illness. With approximately 4 to 5 million SNPs in the human genome and recent studies suggesting that a large portion of SNP studies are not reproducible, we suggest that the ultimate clinical utility of SNPs in acute illness depends on validation and quality control measures. To investigate this issue, in December 2018 and January 2019 we searched the literature for peer-reviewed studies reporting data on associations between SNPs and clinical outcomes and between SNPs and pharmaceuticals (i.e., pharmacogenomics) published between January 2011 to February 2019. We review key methodologies and results from a variety of clinical and pharmacological gene association studies, including trauma and sepsis studies, as illustrative examples on current SNP association studies. In this review article, we have found three key points which strengthen the potential accuracy of SNP association studies in acute illness and other diseases: providing evidence of following a protocol quality control method such as the one in Nature Protocols or the OncoArray QC Guidelines; enrolling enough patients to have large cohort groups; and validating the SNPs using an independent technique such as a second study using the same SNPs with new patient cohorts. Our survey suggests the need to standardize validation methods and SNP quality control measures in medicine in general, and specifically in the context of complex disease states such as acute illness.
急性病是一种复杂的反应组合,涉及失调的炎症和免疫反应,最终与多个器官功能障碍有关。基因关联研究已经将单核苷酸多态性(SNPs)与多种疾病状态下的临床和药物反应结果联系起来,包括急性病。人类基因组中约有 4 到 500 万个 SNPs,最近的研究表明,大部分 SNP 研究是不可复制的,因此我们认为 SNPs 在急性病中的最终临床应用取决于验证和质量控制措施。为了研究这个问题,我们于 2018 年 12 月至 2019 年 1 月,检索了 2011 年 1 月至 2019 年 2 月期间发表的有关 SNPs 与临床结果以及 SNPs 与药物(即药物基因组学)之间关联的同行评议研究文献。我们回顾了各种临床和药理学基因关联研究的关键方法和结果,包括创伤和脓毒症研究,作为当前 SNP 关联研究的示例。在这篇综述文章中,我们发现了三个关键点,这些关键点增强了 SNPs 关联研究在急性病和其他疾病中的潜在准确性:提供遵循协议质量控制方法(如《自然方案》或 OncoArray QC 指南)的证据;招募足够的患者以形成大型队列组;并使用独立技术(如使用相同 SNPs 对新患者队列进行的第二项研究)验证 SNPs。我们的调查表明,需要在医学领域,特别是在急性病等复杂疾病状态下,标准化验证方法和 SNP 质量控制措施。