AI & RoboticsNews

IBM uses AI to evaluate risk of developing genetic diseases

In a study published in the journal Nature Communications, scientists at IBM, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and health tech company Color find evidence that the presence of genetic mutations isn’t a reliable precursor to genetic diseases. They claim diseases can be so greatly influenced by other factors that the risk in carriers is sometimes as low as in that of noncarriers.

The research — which stems from a larger, three-year collaboration between IBM Research and the Broad Institute that was announced in 2019 — aims to support clinicians leveraging data to better identify patients at serious risk for conditions like cardiovascular disease. Insights could be useful in making health care and prevention decisions, helping clinicians choose whether to recommend imaging or more drastic, surgical interventions, like mastectomies.

In the course of the study, an IBM-led team developed models that analyze a person’s genetic risk factors, clinical health records, and biomarker data to more accurately predict the onset of conditions like heart attacks, sudden cardiac death, and atrial fibrillation. With Color, the researchers investigated whether polygenic background — the variants and factors within an individual’s genome — could influence the occurrence of disease in genomic conditions such as familial hypercholesterolemia, hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, and Lynch syndrome.

The coauthors analyzed de-identified records from over 80,000 patients across two large data sets, the UK Biobank and Color’s own. Among carriers of a monogenic risk variant, they identified “substantial variations” in risk based on polygenic background, implying carriers don’t always develop diseases. For example, the probability of developing coronary artery disease (CAD) by age 75 ranged from 17.5% to 77.9% for carriers of familial hypercholesterolemia. For comparison, CAD prevalence among noncarriers ranged from 13% if they had a low-risk polygenic score to 41% with a high-risk score.

“By leveraging large databases to combine and analyze medical and genomic data from tens of thousands of people, we have been able to shed significant new light on a number of serious, chronic diseases,” IBM Research principal scientist and coauthor Kenney Ng said. “Ultimately, our findings unveil a silver lining: Even if an individual carries a genetic mutation associated with one of these diseases, their absolute risk might not be as set in stone as previously thought. In fact, their absolute risk might be nearly equivalent to an individual who doesn’t carry the mutation at all — depending on other factors and mutations within their specific genome.”

IBM says future work will include investigating ways genomics, clinical data, and AI can be harnessed to develop new tools that offer health professionals insight into disease risk. The goal is to build algorithms that accurately indicate a predisposition to a health condition and make those tools available — including methods to calculate an individual’s risk of disease based on variants in a genome.

IBM previously collaborated with the Broad Institute in 2016. As part of a five-year project, the company sought to help researchers using AI and genomics better understand how cancers become resistant to therapies.


Author: Kyle Wiggers.
Source: Venturebeat

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