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      Bridging the Gaps in Personalized Medicine Value Assessment: A Review of the Need for Outcome Metrics Across Stakeholders and Scientific Disciplines

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          Abstract

          Despite the monumental advances in genomics, relatively few health care provider organizations in the United States offer personalized or precision medicine as part of the routine clinical workflow. The gaps between research and applied genomic medicine may be a result of a cultural gap across various stakeholders representing scientists, clinicians, patients, policy makers, and third party payers. Scientists are trained to assess the health care value of genomics by either quantifying population-scale effects, or through the narrow lens of clinical trials where standard of care is compared with the predictive power of a single or handful of genetic variants. While these metrics are an essential first-step in assessing and documenting the clinical utility of genomics, they are rarely followed-up with other assessments of health care value that are critical to stakeholders who use different measures to define value. The limited value assessment in both the research and implementation science of precision medicine is likely due to necessary logistical constraints of these teams; engaging bioethicists, health care economists, and individual patient belief systems is incredibly daunting for geneticists and informaticians conducting research. In this narrative review, we concisely describe several definitions of value through various stakeholder viewpoints. We highlight the existing gaps that prevent clinical translation of scientific findings generally as well as more specifically using two present-day, extreme scenarios: 1) genetically-guided warfarin dosing representing a handful of genetic markers and more than ten years of basic and translational research and 2) next generation sequencing representing genome-dense data lacking substantial evidence for implementation. These contemporary scenarios highlight the need for various stakeholders to broadly adopt frameworks designed to define and collect multiple value measures across different disciplines to ultimately impact more universal acceptance of and reimbursement for genomic medicine.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101474167
          35481
          Public Health Genomics
          Public Health Genomics
          Public health genomics
          1662-4246
          1662-8063
          5 September 2019
          27 August 2019
          2019
          27 August 2020
          : 22
          : 1-2
          : 16-24
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Cleveland Institute for Computational Biology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106
          [2 ]Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH
          [3 ]Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH
          Author notes
          Corresponding author: Dana C. Crawford, PhD, 2103 Cornell Road, Wolstein Research Building, Suite 2-527, Cleveland, OH 44106, Dana.crawford@ 123456case.edu , (216) 368-5546
          Article
          PMC6752968 PMC6752968 6752968 nihpa1045687
          10.1159/000501974
          6752968
          31454805
          617014b2-ffb6-45e1-8ed9-f1b5a86971ab
          History
          Categories
          Article

          translational research,Genetic research,genetic testing,personalized medicine

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