Including diverse and admixed populations in genetic epidemiology research Article

Caliebe, A, Tekola-Ayele, F, Darst, BF et al. (2022). Including diverse and admixed populations in genetic epidemiology research . 46(7), 347-371. 10.1002/gepi.22492

cited authors

  • Caliebe, A; Tekola-Ayele, F; Darst, BF; Wang, X; Song, YE; Gui, J; Sebro, RA; Balding, DJ; Saad, M; DubĂ©, MP

authors

abstract

  • The inclusion of ancestrally diverse participants in genetic studies can lead to new discoveries and is important to ensure equitable health care benefit from research advances. Here, members of the Ethical, Legal, Social, Implications (ELSI) committee of the International Genetic Epidemiology Society (IGES) offer perspectives on methods and analysis tools for the conduct of inclusive genetic epidemiology research, with a focus on admixed and ancestrally diverse populations in support of reproducible research practices. We emphasize the importance of distinguishing socially defined population categorizations from genetic ancestry in the design, analysis, reporting, and interpretation of genetic epidemiology research findings. Finally, we discuss the current state of genomic resources used in genetic association studies, functional interpretation, and clinical and public health translation of genomic findings with respect to diverse populations.

publication date

  • October 1, 2022

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 347

end page

  • 371

volume

  • 46

issue

  • 7