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14 Jun
2018-06-14 - 2018-06-15    
All Day
ConferenceSeries LLC Ltd in conjunction with its institutional partners and Editorial Board Members are delighted to invite you all to the 13th World Congress on Healthcare and Technologies  going [...]
21 Jun
2018-06-21 - 2018-06-22    
All Day
Conference Series extends its welcome to 2nd World Congress on Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare June 21-22, 2018 Dublin, Ireland. With a theme “Consolidating Knowledge to Improve [...]
Events on 2018-06-14
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Articles

Dec 03: EHRs Help Researchers Find Links Between Genetics and Diseases

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Researchers have found new links between genetics and various diseases by mining electronic health record data, according to a study published Sunday in the journal Nature Biotechnology, the New York Times reports.

Study Details

For the study, the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics Network — a consortium of medical research institutions, which includes the Mayo Clinic and the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine — surveyed thousands of EHRs (Zimmer, New York Times, 11/28).

The institutions grouped about 15,000 billing codes contained in around 13,000 EHRs into 1,600 disease categories (Young, MIT Technology Review, 11/24).

The researchers then looked for links to diseases in the EHRs that contained DNA data (Hall, FierceHealthIT, 11/25).

Study authors identified 63 new genetic links to diseases, ranging from skin cancer to anemia (New York Times, 11/28).

Implications

The EHR study method — called a phenome-wide association study — marks a significant change from the 13-year-old genome-wide association model, in which researchers search for common mutations in the DNA of people with same disease (Taylor, FierceBiotechIT, 12/2).

Robert Green, a geneticist at Harvard Medical School, called the new study “a phenomenal proof of concept.”

Joshua Denny — a biomedical informatics researcher at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and a co-author of the new study — said the new method could:

  • Help link seemingly unrelated symptoms;
  • Identify potentially harmful side effects of a drug; and
  • Guide research to new uses for drugs.

Denny said, “If you have a drug that targets a certain gene, you can understand what range of diseases you can use that drug to treat”

source