Status
Conditions
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
This study will provide rigorous evaluation of implementing a virtual genome center into community clinical settings without highly specialized resources, thereby offering generalizable insights as to how best to implement genomic medicine at scale and for other age groups. This intervention has great potential to address disparities in genomic medicine among low-income and underrepresented minority (URM) populations and will enhance capacity for providers and health systems to utilize highly specialized genomic techniques in their communities.
The goal of this study is to achieve equitable access to state-of-the-art genomic medical care to sick newborns in community centers that predominately care for low-income and racial/ethnic minority populations through the creation of a virtual genome center (VIGOR). VIGOR will provide a venue for physician and family education, genomic expert consultation, reanalysis of unsolved sequencing data, and access to cutting edge therapeutic innovation, thereby facilitating institutionalization of genomic best practices in community settings, and not just highly specialized referral centers.
Full description
Genomic medicine has rapidly advanced in the past decade enabling earlier diagnosis and personalized treatment. However, only a few highly specialized centers in the US have the resources to take advantage of these advances in patient care. This has created a large health equity gap whereby patients cared for in typical community settings, often low-income and/or representing racial/ethnic minorities, do not receive equitable medical care. Another barrier to the wider utilization of genomic medicine is the poor dissemination of knowledge among clinicians, especially in community settings. A wide gap exists in the implementation of genomic medicine from diagnosis to personalized therapies, a field experiencing huge advances but still subject to wide disparities in accessibility. This study aims to develop and test the implementation of a strategy to break down these barriers to genomic medicine. The target population is sick newborns admitted to the NICU that present with probable genetic conditions. This study proposes a novel center, VIrtual GenOme CenteR (VIGOR). VIGOR will be a center that can remotely support clinicians and families working in community NICUs.
This study will provide rigorous evaluation of implementing a virtual genome center at community clinical settings without highly specialized resources, thereby offering generalizable insights as to how best to implement genomic medicine at scale and for other age groups. This intervention has great potential to address disparities in genomic medicine among low-income and underrepresented minorities (URM) populations and will enhance capacity for providers and health systems to utilize highly specialized genomic techniques in their communities.
The goal of this study is to achieve equitable access to state-of-the-art genomic medical care to sick newborns in community centers that predominately care for low-income and racial/ethnic minority populations through the creation of a virtual genome center (VIGOR). VIGOR will provide a venue for physician and family education, genomic expert consultation, reanalysis of unsolved sequencing data, and access to cutting edge therapeutic innovation, thereby facilitating institutionalization of genomic best practices in community settings, and not just highly specialized referral centers.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
750 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Vanessa J Young, MS, BA, RN; Timothy Yu, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal