Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America.
Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Jul 1;15(7):e0234962. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0234962. eCollection 2020.
The All of Us Research Program (All of Us) is a national effort to accelerate health research by exploring the relationship between lifestyle, environment, and genetics. It is set to become one of the largest research efforts in U.S. history, aiming to build a national resource of data from at least one million participants. All of Us aims to address the need for more diversity in research and set the stage for that diversity to be leveraged in precision medicine research to come. This paper describes how the program assessed demographic characteristics of participants who have enrolled in other U.S. biomedical research cohorts to better understand which groups are traditionally represented or underrepresented in biomedical research. We 1) reviewed the enrollment characteristics of national cohort studies like All of Us, and 2) surveyed the literature, focusing on key diversity categories essential to the program's enrollment aims. Based on these efforts, All of Us emphasizes enrollment of racial and ethnic minorities, and has formally designated the following additional groups as historically underrepresented: individuals-with inadequate access to medical care; under the age of 18 or over 65; with an annual household income at or below 200% of the federal poverty level; who have a cognitive or physical disability; have less than a high school education or equivalent; are intersex; identify as a sexual or gender minority; or live in rural or non-metropolitan areas. Research accounting for wider demographic variability is critical. Only by ensuring diversity and by addressing the very barriers that limit it, can we position All of Us to better understand and tackle health disparities.
美国全民研究计划(All of Us)是一项旨在通过探索生活方式、环境和遗传因素之间的关系来加速健康研究的国家努力。它有望成为美国历史上规模最大的研究之一,旨在从至少 100 万名参与者中建立一个国家数据资源。All of Us 旨在解决研究中需要更多多样性的问题,并为未来精准医学研究中的多样性利用奠定基础。本文描述了该计划如何评估已参加其他美国生物医学研究队列的参与者的人口统计学特征,以更好地了解哪些群体在生物医学研究中传统上有代表性或代表性不足。我们 1)审查了像 All of Us 这样的全国性队列研究的入组特征,2)调查了文献,重点关注对该计划入组目标至关重要的关键多样性类别。基于这些努力,All of Us 强调招募少数族裔和族裔群体,并正式指定以下其他群体为历史上代表性不足的群体:医疗服务不足的个人;年龄在 18 岁以下或 65 岁以上;家庭年收入在联邦贫困线的 200%或以下;有认知或身体残疾的人;受教育程度低于高中或同等学历;是雌雄同体;自认为是性少数群体或性别少数群体;或居住在农村或非大都市地区。考虑更广泛人口统计学变异性的研究至关重要。只有通过确保多样性,并解决限制多样性的障碍,我们才能使 All of Us 更好地理解和解决健康差异问题。