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Converge where Healthcare meets Innovation
2015-09-02 - 2015-09-03    
All Day
MedCity CONVERGE provides the most accurate picture of the future of medical innovation by gathering decision-makers from every sector to debate the challenges and opportunities [...]
11th Global Summit and Expo on Food & Beverages
2015-09-22 - 2015-09-24    
All Day
Event Date: September 22-24, 2016 Event Venue: Embassy Suites, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA Theme: Accentuate Innovations and Emerging Novel Research in Food and Beverage Sector [...]
2015 AHIMA Convention and Exhibit
2015-09-26 - 2015-09-30    
All Day
The Affordable Care Act, Meaningful Use, HIPAA, and of course, ICD-10 are changing healthcare. Central to healthcare today is health information. It is used throughout [...]
Transforming Medicine: Evidence-Driven mHealth
2015-09-30 - 2015-10-02    
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
September 30-October 2, 2015Digital Medicine 2015 Save the Date (PDF, 1.23 MB) Download the Scripps CME app to your smart phone and/or tablet for the conference [...]
Health 2.0 9th Annual Fall Conference
2015-10-04 - 2015-10-07    
All Day
October 4th - 7th, 2015 Join us for our 9th Annual Fall Conference, October 4-7th. Set over 3 1/2 days, the 9th Annual Fall Conference will [...]
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research papers

Researchers repurpose genetic data, EMR to perform large-scale PheWAS study

genetic data

Vanderbilt University Medical Center researchers and co-authors from four other U.S. institutions from the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network are repurposing genetic data and electronic medical records to perform the first large-scale phenome-wide association study (PheWAS), released today in Nature Biotechnology.

Traditional genetic studies start with one phenotype and look at one or many genotypes, PheWAS does the inverse by looking at many diseases for one genetic variant or genotype.

“This study broadly shows that we can take decades of off-the-shelf electronic medical record data, link them to DNA, and quickly validate known associations across hundreds of previous studies,” said lead author Josh Denny, M.D., M.S., Vanderbilt Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics and Medicine. “And, at the same time, we can discover many new associations.

“A third important finding is that our method does not select any particular disease – it is searches simultaneously for more than a thousand diseases that bring one to the doctor. By doing this, we were able to show some genes that are associated several diseases or traits, while others are not,” he added.

Researchers used genotype data from 13,835 individuals of European descent, exhibiting 1,358 diseases collectively. The team then ran PheWAS on 3,144 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP’s), checking each SNP’s association with each of the 1,358 disease phenotypes.

As a result, study authors reported 63 previously unknown SNP-disease associations, the strongest of which related to skin diseases.

“The key result is that the method works,” Denny said. “This is a robust test of PheWAS across all domains of disease, showing that you can see all types of phenotypes in the electronic medical record – cancers, diabetes, heart diseases, brain diseases, etc. – and replicate what’s known about their associations with various SNPs.”

An online PheWAS catalog spawned by the study may help investigators understand the influence of many common genetic variants on human conditions.

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