The contribution of genomic research to explaining racial disparities in cardiovascular disease: A systematic review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-1-2015
Abstract
After nearly a decade of genome-wide association studies, no assessment has yet been made of their contribution toward an explanation of the most prominent racial health disparities observed at the population level. We examined populations of African and European ancestry and focused on cardiovascular diseases, which are collectively the largest contributor to the racial mortality gap. We conducted a systematic search for review articles and meta-analyses published in 2007-2013 in which genetic data from both populations were available. We identified 68 articles relevant to this question; however, few reported significant associations in both racial groups, with just 3 variants meeting study-specific significance criteria. For most outcomes, there were too few estimates for quantitative summarization, but when summarization was possible, racial group did not contribute to heterogeneity. Most associations reported from genome-wide searches were small, difficult to replicate, and in no consistent direction that favored one racial group or another. Although the substantial investment in this technology might have produced clinical advances, it has thus far made little or no contribution to our understanding of population-level racial health disparities in cardiovascular disease.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
American Journal of Epidemiology
First Page
464
Last Page
472
Recommended Citation
Kaufman, J., Dolman, L., Rushani, D., & Cooper, R. (2015). The contribution of genomic research to explaining racial disparities in cardiovascular disease: A systematic review. American Journal of Epidemiology, 181 (7), 464-472. https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwu319