Institute for Health and Aging, University of California, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Oct 29;16(10):e0258571. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0258571. eCollection 2021.
Population-based genomic screening is at the forefront of a new approach to disease prevention. Yet the lack of diversity in genome wide association studies and ongoing debates about the appropriate use of racial and ethnic categories in genomics raise key questions about the translation of genomic knowledge into clinical practice. This article reports on an ethnographic study of a large pragmatic clinical trial of breast cancer screening called WISDOM (Women Informed to Screen Depending On Measures of Risk). Our ethnography illuminates the challenges of using race or ethnicity as a risk factor in the implementation of precision breast cancer risk assessment. Our analysis provides critical insights into how categories of race, ethnicity and ancestry are being deployed in the production of genomic knowledge and medical practice, and key challenges in the development and implementation of novel Polygenic Risk Scores in the research and clinical applications of this emerging science. Specifically, we show how the conflation of social and biological categories of difference can influence risk prediction for individuals who exist at the boundaries of these categories, affecting the perceptions and practices of scientists, clinicians, and research participants themselves. Our research highlights the potential harms of practicing genomic medicine using under-theorized and ambiguous categories of race, ethnicity, and ancestry, particularly in an adaptive, pragmatic trial where research findings are applied in the clinic as they emerge. We contribute to the expanding literature on categories of difference in post-genomic science by closely examining the implementation of a large breast cancer screening study that aims to personalize breast cancer risk using both common and rare genomic markers.
基于人群的基因组筛查处于疾病预防新方法的前沿。然而,全基因组关联研究缺乏多样性,以及在基因组学中种族和民族类别适当使用方面的持续争论,提出了将基因组知识转化为临床实践的关键问题。本文报告了一项关于乳腺癌筛查大型实用临床试验 WISDOM(Women Informed to Screen Depending On Measures of Risk 的民族志研究。我们的民族志阐明了在实施精确乳腺癌风险评估中使用种族或民族作为风险因素的挑战。我们的分析提供了对种族、民族和祖先类别在基因组知识和医疗实践中的应用的深刻见解,以及在这一新兴科学的研究和临床应用中开发和实施新型多基因风险评分所面临的关键挑战。具体来说,我们展示了社会和生物差异类别的混淆如何影响处于这些类别边界的个体的风险预测,从而影响科学家、临床医生和研究参与者自身的看法和做法。我们的研究强调了在适应性、实用试验中,使用未经理论化和模糊的种族、民族和祖先类别来实践基因组医学的潜在危害,在这种试验中,研究结果随着出现而应用于临床。我们通过仔细研究旨在使用常见和罕见基因组标记个性化乳腺癌风险的大型乳腺癌筛查研究的实施情况,为后基因组科学中关于差异类别的不断扩大的文献做出了贡献。