ID

45896

Descrição

Principal Investigator: Dan Roden, MD, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA MeSH: Dose-Response Relationship, Drug https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gap/cgi-bin/study.cgi?study_id=phs000991 The Vanderbilt Electronic Systems for Pharmacogenomic Assessment (VESPA) Project is a large electronic medical record (EMR)- and biobank-based initiative for translational pharmacogenomics discoveries. Key research resources utilized in this effort include the BioVU DNA databank and associated Synthetic Derivative database of clinical information, and software tools developed to identify drugs and clinical events using EHR-derived structured and unstructured ("free text") data. Cohorts include subjects with primarily drug-response phenotypes, and most cases and controls identified include three data types: ICD-9 codes, medication regimens, and medical test results. Advanced informatics methods, such as natural language processing, were also used for some phenotypes. Algorithms used event-sequence analyses to establish temporal relationships between drugs and phenotypes. Both cases and control algorithms excluded records that contained specific comorbidities and were refined to achieve positive predictive value (PPV) 90%. For automated algorithms failing to meet this threshold, manual review was coupled with algorithms to validate that the included cases were true positives. A total of 11,639 subjects met phenotyping criteria for a least one of the 28 phenotypes investigated. Across all phenotypes cases and controls, 90% were reused as either a case or control for a least one other phenotype. Data are deposited for individual phenotypes in the VESPA substudies. *Substudies*:- VESPA: Genome Wide Association Study of Serum Creatinine during Vancomycin Therapy and Vancomycin Pharmacokinetics - phs000894 - VESPA: Genome Wide Study of Clinically Diagnosed Ace Inhibitor Cough - phs000992

Link

dbGaP study = phs000991

Palavras-chave

  1. 08/12/2023 08/12/2023 - Simon Heim
Titular dos direitos

Dan Roden, MD, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA

Transferido a

8 de dezembro de 2023

DOI

Para um pedido faça login.

Licença

Creative Commons BY 4.0

Comentários do modelo :

Aqui pode comentar o modelo. Pode comentá-lo especificamente através dos balões de texto nos grupos de itens e itens.

Comentários do grupo de itens para :

Comentários do item para :

Para descarregar formulários, precisa de ter uma sessão iniciada. Por favor faça login ou registe-se gratuitamente.

dbGaP phs000991 VESPA: Vanderbilt Electronic Systems for Pharmacogenomic Assessment

Similar models

Use este formulário para feedback, perguntas e sugestões de aperfeiçoamento.

Campos marcados com * são obrigatórios.

Do you need help on how to use the search function? Please watch the corresponding tutorial video for more details and learn how to use the search function most efficiently.

Watch Tutorial