TY - JOUR
T1 - Health equity innovation in precision medicine
T2 - data stewardship and agency to expand representation in clinicogenomics
AU - Silva, Patrick J.
AU - Rahimzadeh, Vasiliki
AU - Powell, Reid
AU - Husain, Junaid
AU - Grossman, Scott
AU - Hansen, Adam
AU - Hinkel, Jennifer
AU - Rosengarten, Rafael
AU - Ory, Marcia G.
AU - Ramos, Kenneth S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Most forms of clinical research examine a very minute cross section of the patient journey. Much of the knowledge and evidence base driving current genomic medicine practice entails blind spots arising from underrepresentation and lack of research participation in clinicogenomic databases. The flaws are perpetuated in AI models and clinical practice guidelines that reflect the lack of diversity in data being used. Participation in clinical research and biobanks is impeded in many populations due to a variety of factors that include knowledge, trust, healthcare access, administrative barriers, and technology gaps. A recent symposium brought industry, clinical, and research participants in clinicogenomics to discuss practical challenges and potential for new data sharing models that are patient centric and federated in nature and can address health disparities that might be perpetuated by lack of diversity in clinicogenomic research, biobanks, and datasets. Clinical data governance was recognized as a multiagent problem, and governance practices need to be more patient centric to address most barriers. Digital tools that preserve privacy, document provenance, and enable the management of data as intellectual property have great promise. Policy updates realigning and rationalizing clinical data governance practices are warranted.
AB - Most forms of clinical research examine a very minute cross section of the patient journey. Much of the knowledge and evidence base driving current genomic medicine practice entails blind spots arising from underrepresentation and lack of research participation in clinicogenomic databases. The flaws are perpetuated in AI models and clinical practice guidelines that reflect the lack of diversity in data being used. Participation in clinical research and biobanks is impeded in many populations due to a variety of factors that include knowledge, trust, healthcare access, administrative barriers, and technology gaps. A recent symposium brought industry, clinical, and research participants in clinicogenomics to discuss practical challenges and potential for new data sharing models that are patient centric and federated in nature and can address health disparities that might be perpetuated by lack of diversity in clinicogenomic research, biobanks, and datasets. Clinical data governance was recognized as a multiagent problem, and governance practices need to be more patient centric to address most barriers. Digital tools that preserve privacy, document provenance, and enable the management of data as intellectual property have great promise. Policy updates realigning and rationalizing clinical data governance practices are warranted.
KW - Clinicogenomic registries
KW - Data infrastructure
KW - Health equity
KW - Interoperability
KW - Precision medicine
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U2 - 10.1186/s12961-024-01258-9
DO - 10.1186/s12961-024-01258-9
M3 - Comment/debate
C2 - 39695714
AN - SCOPUS:85212466620
SN - 1478-4505
VL - 22
JO - Health Research Policy and Systems
JF - Health Research Policy and Systems
IS - 1
M1 - 170
ER -