The BabySeq Project: A clinical trial of genome sequencing in a diverse cohort of infants.

IF 8.1 1区 生物学 Q1 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Hadley Stevens Smith,Bethany Zettler,Casie A Genetti,Madison R Hickingbotham,Tanner F Coleman,Matthew Lebo,Anna Nagy,Hana Zouk,Lisa Mahanta,Kurt D Christensen,Stacey Pereira,Nidhi D Shah,Nina B Gold,Sheyenne Walmsley,Sarita Edwards,Ramin Homayouni,Graham P Krasan,Hakon Hakonarson,Carol R Horowitz,Bruce D Gelb,Bruce R Korf,Amy L McGuire,Ingrid A Holm,Robert C Green
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Abstract

Efforts to implement and evaluate genome sequencing (GS) as a screening tool for newborns and infants are expanding worldwide. The first iteration of the BabySeq Project (2015-2019), a randomized controlled trial of newborn sequencing, produced novel evidence on medical, behavioral, and economic outcomes. The second iteration of BabySeq, which began participant recruitment in January 2023, examines GS outcomes in a larger, more diverse cohort of more than 500 infants up to one year of age recruited from pediatric clinics at several sites across the United States. The trial aims for families who self-identify as Black/African American or Hispanic/Latino to make up more than 50% of final enrollment, and key aspects of the trial design were co-developed with a community advisory board. All enrolled families receive genetic counseling and a family history report. Half of enrolled infants are randomized to receive GS with comprehensive interpretation of pathogenic and likely pathogenic variants in more than 4,300 genes associated with childhood-onset and actionable adult-onset conditions, as well as larger-scale chromosomal copy number variants classified as pathogenic or likely pathogenic. GS result reports include variants associated with disease (Mendelian disease risks) and carrier status of autosomal-recessive and X-linked disorders. Investigators evaluate the utility and impacts of implementing a GS screening program in a diverse cohort of infants using medical record review and longitudinal parent surveys. In this perspective, we describe the rationale for the second iteration of the BabySeq Project, the outcomes being assessed, and the key decisions collaboratively made by the study team and community advisory board.
婴儿基因组测序项目:针对不同婴儿群体的基因组测序临床试验。
作为新生儿和婴儿的筛查工具,基因组测序(GS)的实施和评估工作正在全球范围内不断扩大。BabySeq项目(2015-2019年)的第一次迭代是一项新生儿测序随机对照试验,在医疗、行为和经济结果方面产生了新的证据。BabySeq 项目的第二次迭代于 2023 年 1 月开始招募参与者,将对从美国多个地点的儿科诊所招募的 500 多名一岁以内婴儿组成的更大规模、更多样化的队列中的 GS 结果进行研究。试验的目标是让自我认同为黑人/非洲裔美国人或西班牙裔/拉丁美洲人的家庭占最终入组人数的50%以上,试验设计的主要方面是与社区咨询委员会共同开发的。所有入组家庭都会接受遗传咨询和家族病史报告。一半的入组婴儿将随机接受 GS 检测,全面解读与儿童发病和成人发病相关的 4,300 多个基因中的致病性和可能致病性变异,以及被归类为致病性或可能致病性的大规模染色体拷贝数变异。GS 结果报告包括与疾病(孟德尔疾病风险)相关的变异以及常染色体隐性遗传病和 X 连锁遗传病的携带者状态。研究人员通过病历审查和家长纵向调查,评估了在不同婴儿队列中实施 GS 筛查计划的效用和影响。在这篇论文中,我们将介绍开展 BabySeq 项目第二次迭代的理由、评估的结果以及研究团队和社区顾问委员会共同做出的关键决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.70
自引率
4.10%
发文量
185
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Human Genetics (AJHG) is a monthly journal published by Cell Press, chosen by The American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) as its premier publication starting from January 2008. AJHG represents Cell Press's first society-owned journal, and both ASHG and Cell Press anticipate significant synergies between AJHG content and that of other Cell Press titles.
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