Equity-focused implementation to enhance access to rare disease genomic research and understand diverse perspectives.

Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

PURPOSE: Rare disease genomic research suffers from a lack of diverse participation. We therefore implemented and evaluated a multi-faceted intervention to support recruitment of populations previously-underrepresented by race, ethnicity, primary language, household income, education level, or rural residence to the Rare Genomes Project (RGP).METHODS: For a prospective cohort, we tracked completion of our enrollment processes supported by interventions including clinician engagement, language support, proactive and flexible participant contact, and use of mobile phlebotomy. Participants were offered a survey upon enrollment to assess values and priorities.RESULTS: 161/195 (83%) participants completed enrollment. High-yield interventions included clinician referral forms and increased staff assistance. Genome sequencing data has been generated for 133 participants, with a diagnosis found for 17 (13%) and candidate for 23 (17%) thus far. Most diagnosed participants (13/17, 76%) benefited from clinician rather than self-referral. Perceived importance of a genetic diagnosis was ranked very/extremely high for 81/96 (84%) of participants. Spanish primary language was associated with higher perceived importance and high income with lower perceived importance, although only income remained significant in a multivariable model.CONCLUSION: Overall, our equity-focused initiative enabled enrollment of participants from populations previously underrepresented in rare disease genomic research and offers insight into potential motivators.

Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Pages
101667
Date Published
12/2025
ISSN
1530-0366
DOI
10.1016/j.gim.2025.101667
PubMed ID
41420489
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