Yvonnet Sarah, Reim Pauline Kromann, Thuesen Anne Cathrine Baun
Medical Museion, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Diabetes Spectr. 2025 Jun 9;38(3):343-352. doi: 10.2337/ds24-0081. eCollection 2025 Summer.
Diabetes is a complex and highly heterogeneous disease, and its traditional division into broad diagnostic categories such as type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes fails to capture its underlying pathology, which can lead to diagnostic misclassification and suboptimal treatment. Growing evidence of the genetic components of diabetes combined with advancements in and availability of genomic technologies have created high expectations for precision medicine in the field of diabetes, which have yet to be met. Successfully implementing genomic precision medicine in the clinical setting requires bridging the translational gap between research and practice. At the core of this effort lies the concept of actionability, which lacks a clear, cross-disciplinary definition and robust and broadly accepted criteria to assess when and in which contexts a genetic variant is actionable. This work is a collaborative effort between philosophy of medicine and biomedical science disciplines that seeks to provide a framework to assess the actionability of genetic variants in the treatment and management of diabetes. Building on the scientific, medical, and philosophical literature and using an example case study, the authors describe core aspects of actionability and evaluate the tensions between research and practice, diagnosis and discovery, and clinical actionability and relevance.
糖尿病是一种复杂且高度异质性的疾病,传统上它被宽泛地分为1型糖尿病和2型糖尿病等诊断类别,却未能涵盖其潜在病理,这可能导致诊断错误分类以及治疗效果欠佳。越来越多关于糖尿病遗传成分的证据,再加上基因组技术的进步和可用性,使得人们对糖尿病领域的精准医学寄予厚望,但这些期望尚未实现。要在临床环境中成功实施基因组精准医学,需要弥合研究与实践之间的转化差距。这项工作的核心是可操作性概念,它缺乏一个清晰、跨学科的定义,以及用于评估基因变异何时以及在何种情况下具有可操作性的强有力且被广泛接受的标准。这项工作是医学哲学与生物医学科学学科之间的合作成果,旨在提供一个框架,以评估基因变异在糖尿病治疗和管理中的可操作性。基于科学、医学和哲学文献,并通过一个实例案例研究,作者描述了可操作性的核心方面,并评估了研究与实践、诊断与发现以及临床可操作性与相关性之间的矛盾。