JAMA Insights: Genomics and Precision Health
Precision medicine is a rapidly evolving approach to disease treatment and prevention that matches treatments to patients based on individual genetic variability. To help clinicians understand the latest developments in precision medicine so they can make the most informed decisions for their patients JAMA in 2017 is publishing a series of essays to explain the state of the field, its concepts, and technologies.
Browse all articles related to Genetics and Genomics across the JAMA Network at
Series Articles
Introducing "Genomics and Precision Health"
JAMA | Editorial, May 9, 2017
Finding the Rare Pathogenic Variants in a Human Genome CME
JAMA | JAMA Insights, May 9, 2017
Chromosomal Microarray Testing for Children With Unexplained Neurodevelopmental Disorders CME
JAMA | JAMA Insights, June 27, 2017
Cascade Screening for Familial Hypercholesterolemia and the Use of Genetic Testing CME
JAMA | JAMA Insights, July 25, 2017
Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis for Mendelian Conditions CME
JAMA | JAMA Insights, September 5, 2017
Cancer DNA in the Circulation: The Liquid Biopsy CME
JAMA | JAMA Insights, October 3, 2017
Mendelian Randomization CME
JAMA | JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods, November 21, 2017
Treating Specific Variants Causing Cystic Fibrosis
JAMA | JAMA Insights, December 5, 2017
Sequencing of Tumor DNA to Guide Cancer Risk Assessment and Therapy
JAMA | JAMA Insights, April 10, 2018
Noninvasive Prenatal Genetic Screening Using Cell-free DNA
JAMA | JAMA Insights, July 30, 2018
Distinguishing Variant Pathogenicity From Genetic Diagnosis: How to Know Whether a Variant Causes a Condition
JAMA | JAMA Insights, October 15, 2018
Next-Generation Sequencing of Infectious Pathogens
JAMA | JAMA Insights, February 14, 2019
What Are Polygenic Scores and Why Are They Important?
JAMA | JAMA Insights, April 8, 2019
Improving the Understanding of Genetic Variants in Rare Disease With Large-scale Reference Populations
JAMA | JAMA Insights, August 30, 2019
Genetic Ancestry Testing: What Is It and Why Is It Important?
JAMA | JAMA Insights, February 14, 2020
Glossary of Genomics Terms
- Allele: Alternative form of a gene or DNA sequence. Variations in clinical traits and phenotypes are allelic if they arise from the same gene sequence or locus and nonallelic if they arise from different gene sequences of different loci.
- Allelism: Whether a second variant (allele) is on the same or the other chromosomal copy in a dominant or recessive condition.
- Alternative splicing: Use of different exons in formation of mRNA from initially identical transcripts. This results in the generation of related proteins from 1 gene, often in a tissue or developmental stage–specific manner.
- Analytical validity: The likelihood that a test result is correct, ie, a specific variant said to be present is present or said to be absent is absent.
- Aneuploidy: The occurrence of one or more extra or missing chromosomes leading to an unbalanced chromosome complement or any chromosome number that is not an exact multiple of the haploid number.
- Array: See Microarray.
- Attributable risk: The difference in incidence of disease in an exposed vs unexposed population; in genetics the exposure can be the presence of a specific genetic variation in the genome.
- Bacteriophage: Viruses whose hosts are bacterial cells.
- Base pair (bp): Two complementary nucleotides that are paired in double-stranded DNA. Adenosine (A) pairs with thymine (T), and guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C). A bp is also used as a physical distance of length of a sequence of nucleotides, eg, 20 bp is a chain of DNA composed of 20 nucleotides.
- Call rate: The rate at which assignment of a specific nucleotide base (A,G,C,T) is made at specific positions in the genome during genotyping or sequencing.
- Candidate gene: A gene believed to influence expression of complex phenotypes due to known biological and/or physiological properties of its products, or to its location near a region of association or linkage.
- Carrier screening: Testing of members of a population for genetic variations associated with genetic conditions (usually autosomal recessive disorders) often for the purpose of reproductive planning.
- Cascade screening: A systematic process for identifying individuals with a medical condition. In genetics, the process begins with an affected family member and entails iterative rounds of testing of closely related relatives, followed by testing of close relatives of those newly discovered as affected.
- cDNA (complementary DNA): A DNA copy of the messenger RNA (mRNA) transcribed from a gene. The cDNA is made from the mRNA using the enzyme reverse transcriptase.
- Cell free DNA (cfDNA): Fragments of DNA circulating in the blood outside of cells.
- Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA): Fragments of DNA derived from cancer cells circulating in the blood outside of cells.
- Clinical utility: The degree to which a test result guides clinical management and improves patient outcomes.
- Clinical validity: The likelihood that a test result correctly predicts presence or absence of disease or risk of disease.
- Coding region: Segments of the genome that contain information specifying the amino acid sequence in proteins.
- Codon: Three bases in a DNA or RNA sequence that specify a single amino acid.
- Copy number variants: Stretches of genomic sequence of roughly 1 kb to 3 Mb in size that are deleted or are duplicated in varying numbers.
- Comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) also array CGH: Technology wherein a DNA test sample is competitively hybridized with a reference sample of DNA of known sequence to a DNA microarray, used to detect copy number changes in the test sample.
- Complex trait: A trait that has a genetic component that does not follow strict mendelian inheritance. It may involve the interaction of 2 or more genes or gene-environment interactions.
- Coverage: The number of times a portion of the genome is sequenced in a sequencing reaction. Often expressed as “depth of coverage” and numerically as 1X, 2X, 3X, etc.
- Cytogenetics: The study of the biology of large-scale DNA structure, usually at the level of chromosomes.
- Cytogenomic analysis: Technologies that assess the presence of copy number variants at locations throughout the genome, one example of which is comparative genomic hybridization.
- Deletion: A type of genetic variation in which nucleotides are lost in a sequence. Deletions may range from 1 nucleotide to millions.
- Denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC): A high-performance liquid chromatography instrument uses temperature-dependent separation of DNA containing mismatched base pairs from PCR-amplified DNA fragments for chromatographic variant analysis.
- Digital polymerase chain reaction: A method for assaying or amplifying quantities of target DNA or RNA in a sample in which the reactions are partitioned to include single or small numbers of target sequences.
- DNA barcoding: A method that uses a short genetic marker in an organism’s DNA to identify it as belonging to a particular species.
- Environmental gene tag: Short sequences of DNA that contain bacterial genes in whole or part that can be used to aid in identification of related genetic material.
- Exome: The entire portion of the genome consisting of protein-coding sequences (as opposed to introns or noncoding DNA between genes).
- Exome sequencing (or whole exome sequencing, WES): A method for determining the base pair order of the protein coding regions of an organism’s DNA. Often used in diagnostic studies both because most disease-related variants occur in protein-coding regions and because it is generally less costly than whole-genome sequencing.
- Exon: Any segment of a gene that is represented in the mature messenger RNA (mRNA) product.
- Fetal Fraction: When referring to cell-free DNA (cfDNA), the percentage of cfDNA in maternal blood of fetal origin.
- Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH): A cytogenetic technique in which fluorescently labeled probes capable of binding to specific DNA regions are used to detect structural variations in the genome.
- Frame shift mutation: Any variation that disrupts the normal sequence of triplets causing a new sequence to be created that codes for different amino acids. Frame shift mutations are usually caused by an insertion or deletion of DNA and typically eventually produce a premature stop codon.
- G-banding: A method for Giemsa staining of condensed human chromosomes from metaphase cells that allows assessment of chromosomal structure by light microscopy.
- GC content: The percentage of nucleotides in a DNA sequence that are either guanine (G) or cytosine (C).
- Genetic heterogeneity: A shared phenotype caused by more than 1 gene.
- Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA): US federal law passed in 2008 prohibiting the use of genetic information for decisions regarding employment or health insurance.
- Genome: The sum total of the genetic material of a cell or an organism.
- Genome annotation: Attachment of biological information to DNA sequence data.
- Genome-wide analysis: A genetic study evaluating the potential linkage of genetic markers located throughout the genome to a specific trait. This approach has been used for mendelian (single-gene) disorders as well as complex traits (genome-wide association study [GWAS]).
- Genomic inflation factor: A mathematical term from genetic epidemiology used to control for population stratification in GWAS.
- Genomic medicine: A term used to describe medical advances and approaches based on human genomic information, sometimes referred to as personalized or precision medicine.
- Genomics: The study of genes and their function.
- Genotype: The specific set of 2 alleles inherited at a genetic locus.
- Haplotype: The combination of linked marker alleles (variants) for a given region of DNA on a single chromosome.
- HapMap: The International HapMap Project developed a haplotype map of the human genome, the HapMap, that describes the common patterns of human DNA sequence variation. The HapMap is a key resource for finding genes affecting health, disease, and responses to drugs and environmental factors. The first release of the HapMap was made in 2005.
- Heterologous expression: A research technique that causes a protein to be produced in a cell that does not normally make (ie, express) that protein.
- Heterozygous (heterozygosity): Having 2 unlike alleles at a particular locus.
- Homozygous (homozygosity): Having 2 like or identical alleles at a particular locus in a diploid genome.
- Human Genome Project: Collective name for several projects begun in 1986 by the US Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to create an ordered set of DNA segments from known chromosomal locations, develop new computational methods for analyzing genetic map and DNA sequence data, and develop new techniques and instruments for detecting and analyzing DNA. The joint national effort, led by DOE and the NIH, was known as the Human Genome Project. The first draft of the human genome DNA sequence, produced by the efforts of the Human Genome Project, was completed in 2001. The Human Genome Project officially ended in April 2003.
- Hybridization: The bonding of single-stranded DNA or RNA into double-stranded DNA or RNA. The ability of complementary stretches of DNA or RNA to hybridize with each other is dependent on the base-pair sequence.
- Identity by descent (IBD): The property of 2 or more alleles that are identical to an ancestral allele, used in gene association studies
- Imputation: A statistical method for inferring genotypes that are not directly measured.
- Indel (insertion/deletion): Variations in a genome including insertions and deletions of nucleotides.
- Insertion: A type of genetic variation in which nucleotides are gained in a sequence. Insertions may range from 1 nucleotide to millions.
- Intron: A segment of DNA that is transcribed into RNA but is ultimately removed from the transcript by splicing together the sequences on either side (exons) to produce messenger RNA (mRNA).
- Karyotype: A description or visual representation of the complement of condensed chromosomes from a cell.
- Kilobase (kb): One thousand base pairs of DNA or RNA.
- Library: A complete set of clones that contains all the genetic material from an organism, tissue, or specific cell type at a specific stage of development.
- Linkage: Two loci (genes or other designated DNA sequence) that reside close enough to each other that recombination (crossing over) rarely occurs between them. Alleles at the 2 loci do not assort independently at meiosis but are likely to be inherited together.
- Linkage disequilibrium: Refers to alleles at loci close enough that they remain inherited together through many generations because their extreme proximity makes recombination (crossing over) between them highly unlikely.
- Locus (plural loci): The physical site on a chromosome occupied by a particular gene or other identifiable DNA sequence characteristic.
- Mendelian disorder (single-gene disorder): A trait or disease that follows the patterns of inheritance that suggest the trait or disease is determined by a gene at a single locus.
- Metagenomics: Study of a collection of genetic material (genomes) from a mixed community of organisms. Metagenomics usually refers to the study of microbial communities.
- Metaphase: A phase of cell division (mitosis) during which DNA is condensed into chromosomal structures that can be visualized using light microscopy.
- Methylation: Covalent attachment of methyl groups to DNA, usually at cytosine bases. Methylation can reduce transcription from a gene and is a mechanism in X-chromosome inactivation and imprinting.
- Microarray: A technology used to study many genes simultaneously, usually consisting of an ordered microscopic pattern of known nucleic acid sequences on a glass slide. In a common type of microarray, a sample of DNA or RNA is added to the slide and sequence-dependent binding is measured using sensitive fluorescent detection methods.
- Microsatellite: A short, repetitive sequence of DNA of variable length that may serve as a marker to follow inheritance or, in tumor DNA, as an indicator of genome instability.
- Minor allele: The allele of a biallelic locus that is less frequent in the study population. Minor allele frequency refers to the proportion of the less common of 2 alleles in a population (with 2 alleles carried by each person at each autosomal locus) ranging from less than 1% to less than 50%.
- Missense mutation: A variation that is typically the change of a single nucleotide that results in the substitution of one amino acid for another in the final gene product.
- Mutation: Any variation of a gene or genetic material from its natural state. Generally, mutations refer to changes that alter the gene in a negative sense, causing the protein product of the gene to have an altered function. (See also variant.)
- Next-generation/high-throughput/massively parallel sequencing: DNA sequencing technology that permits rapid sequencing of large portions of the genome; so called because it vastly increases the throughput over classic Sanger sequencing.
- Nonsense mutation: Any variation that results directly in the formation of a stop codon.
- Nonsynonymous variant: A variant that results in a change in the amino acid sequence of a protein (and therefore may affect the function of the protein).
- Nucleotide: The combination of a nitrogen-containing base, a 5-carbon sugar, and phosphate group forming the A, G, C, T of the sequence of DNA, for example.
- Oncogene: A gene of which 1 or more forms is associated with the development of cancer. Many oncogenes are involved, directly or indirectly, in controlling the rate of cell growth.
- Penetrance: The proportion of individuals of a given genotype who show any evidence of the associated phenotype.
- Pharmacogenetic variant: Genetic changes that alter the way an individual metabolizes or responds to a specific medication.
- Pharmacogenomics: Study of genes related to genetic controlled variation in drug responses.
- Phenotype: The total observable nature of an individual, resulting from interaction of the genotype with the environment.
- Plasmid: Circular extrachromosomal DNA molecules in bacteria that can independently reproduce. Plasmids can be used as vectors in recombinant DNA research, and they can contain genes important to bacterial virulence such as antibiotic resistance in nature.
- Preimplantation genetic diagnosis: testing of embryos for specific genetic abnormalities for which the prospective parents are known to be at risk; performed prior to selective reintroduction of unaffected embryos to the female reproductive tract
- Preimplantation genetic screening: a screening test that seeks to determine the presence of aneuploidy (either too many or too few chromosomes) in a developing embryo prior to selective reintroduction of unaffected embryos to the female reproductive tract
- Polymerase chain reaction (PCR): A procedure in which segments of DNA (including DNA copies of RNA) can be amplified using flanking oligonucleotides called primers and repeated cycles of replication by DNA polymerase.
- Population stratification (also population structure): A form of confounding in genetic association studies caused by genetic differences between cases and controls unrelated to disease but due to sampling them from populations of different ancestries.
- Primer: a short strand of nucleotides (RNA or DNA) that helps initiate new DNA synthesis
- Proband: The affected person whose disorder, or concern about a disorder, brings a family or pedigree to be genetically evaluated.
- Promoter: The sequence of nucleotides located 5′ to the coding sequence of a gene that determines the site for binding of RNA polymerase and the initiation of transcription. More than 1 promoter may be present in a gene and may give rise to different versions of the protein. The promoter may include the DNA sequence TATAA(T)AA(T) (TATA box).
- Prophage: The genome of a bacteriophage when it is integrated into the host bacterial genome or a plasmid.
- Pyrosequencing: A method of determining the ordering of nucleotide bases in a DNA molecule by measuring the synthesis of the complementary DNA strand.
- Quantitative PCR: A PCR-based laboratory technique that allows the accurate measurement of the amount of specific nucleic acids (usually RNA) in a sample.
- Read: A discrete segment of sequence information generated by a sequencing instrument; read length refers to the number of nucleotides in the segment.
- Recombination: The formation of a new set of alleles on a single chromosome that is not the same as either parent owing to a crossover during meiosis.
- Restriction fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP): A type of polymorphism that results from variation in the DNA sequence recognized by restriction enzymes. RFLPs can be used in linkage and gene association studies of traits and diseases.
- Single-nucleotide variant (SNV; also known as a single-nucleotide polymorphism, SNP): DNA sequence variations that occur when a single nucleotide (A, T, C, or G) in the genome sequence is altered. SNVs are the most abundant variant in the human genome and are the most common source of genetic variation.
- Somatic mutation: A change in the DNA in non-germline cells, for example, new mutations in a tumor.
- Stop codon (termination codon): The DNA triplet that causes translation to end when it is found in mRNA. The DNA stop codons are TAG, TAA, and TGA.
- Structural mutation: Large-scale change in genomic DNA, for example, chromosomal inversion.
- Tag SNV: A readily measured SNV that is in strong linkage disequilibrium with multiple other SNVs so that it can serve as a proxy for these SNVs on large-scale genotyping platforms.
- Translocation: A chromosomal segment that has been broken off and reinserted in a different place in the genome.
- Transversion: The substitution of a purine for a pyrimidine nucleotide or vice versa (eg, an A for a C or T) in a DNA sequence.
- Triploidy: A rare form of aneuploidy in which there are 3 sets of each chromosome in a cell.
- Uniparental disomy: The inheritance of both parental copies of a chromosome from one parent and no homologous chromosome from the other parent. The resulting offspring could be affected with a recessive disease if the parent contributing both copies is a carrier.
- Variant (polymorphism): Difference in DNA sequence among individuals that may underlie differences in health. Genetic alterations occurring in more than 1% of a population would be considered useful variants for genetic linkage analysis. The vast majority of DNA variants are benign and not associated with a detectable phenotype.
- Variant allele fraction: The detected percentage of a variation that is not the reference sequence in a DNA sample derived from a nonclonal sample of cells, for example, a tumor DNA sample.
- Variant of unknown significance (VUS): Genetic variant that cannot be definitively determined to be associated with a specific phenotype.
- Whole-genome amplification: a process by which the DNA of a organism in a sample can be chemically replicated, in its entirety, multiple times over in order to increase the amount of sample
- Whole genome sequencing (WGS): A method for determining the base pair order of both protein-coding and non–protein-coding regions of an organism’s DNA. Current technology can provide a near complete human genome; some regions of the genome remain difficult to sequence.
Editors’ Selections
The Case for Remedial Germline Editing—The Long-term View
JAMA Health Forum | JAMA Forum, February 27, 2020
The Need to Improve the Clinical Utility of Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Tests: Either Too Narrow or Too Broad
JAMA | Viewpoint, February 19, 2020
Predictive Accuracy of a Polygenic Risk Score–Enhanced Prediction Model vs a Clinical Risk Score for Coronary Artery Disease
JAMA | Original Investigation, February 18, 2020
Predictive Accuracy of a Polygenic Risk Score Compared With a Clinical Risk Score for Incident Coronary Heart Disease
JAMA | Original Investigation, February 18, 2020
Do Polygenic Risk Scores Improve Patient Selection for Prevention of Coronary Artery Disease?
JAMA | Editorial, February 18, 2020
DNA Prime Editing: A New CRISPR-Based Method to Correct Most Disease-Causing Mutations
JAMA | Bench to Bedside, February 4, 2020
Polygenic Risk, Fitness, and Obesity in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, January 8, 2020
Shared Genetic Loci Between Body Mass Index and Major Psychiatric Disorders: A Genome-wide Association Study
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, January 8, 2020
Be Ready to Talk With Parents About Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing
JAMA Pediatrics | Viewpoint, December 30, 2019
Test for HIV Drug–Resistance Mutations
JAMA | News From the Food and Drug Administration, December 17, 2019
Moving From Cancer Burden to Cancer Genomics for Smoldering Myeloma: A Review
JAMA Oncology | Review, December 12, 2019
DNA-Based Population Screening: Potential Suitability and Important Knowledge Gaps
JAMA | Viewpoint, December 6, 2019
Cardiovascular Disease Prevention at a Crossroads: Precision Medicine or Polypill?
JAMA | Viewpoint, November 25, 2019
Genome-Wide Association Studies
JAMA | JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods, November 5, 2019
Mendelian Randomization—A Journey From Obscurity to Center Stage With a Few Potholes Along the Way
JAMA Neurology | Viewpoint, October 14, 2019
Genome-wide Association of Endophenotypes for Schizophrenia From the Consortium on the Genetics of Schizophrenia (COGS) Study
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, October 9, 2019
Imaging the Whole Genome in Diagnosing Neurologic Disorders
JAMA Neurology | Viewpoint, October 7, 2019
Association of Genetic Variants Related to Combined Exposure to Lower Low-Density Lipoproteins and Lower Systolic Blood Pressure With Lifetime Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
JAMA | Original Investigation, September 2, 2019
Pathogenic Germline Variants in Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Research Letter, August 29, 2019
Multiomics Prediction of Response Rates to Therapies to Inhibit Programmed Cell Death 1 and Programmed Cell Death 1 Ligand 1
JAMA Oncology | Brief Report, August 22, 2019
Risk Assessment, Genetic Counseling, and Genetic Testing for BRCA-Related Cancer in Women: Updated Evidence Report and Systematic Review for the US Preventive Services Task Force
JAMA | US Preventive Services Task Force Evidence Report, August 20, 2019
Hereditary Cancer Evaluation in 2019—a Rapidly Evolving Landscape
JAMA Oncology | Editorial, August 20, 2019
Tackling Epilepsy With High-definition Precision Medicine: A Review
JAMA Neurology | Review, August 5, 2019
Is Genetic Testing for Heart Disease Right for Me?
JAMA Cardiology | JAMA Cardiology Patient Page, July 31, 2019
Association of Genetic and Environmental Factors With Autism in a 5-Country Cohort
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, July 17, 2019
Heritable Genome Editing: Is a Moratorium Needed?
JAMA | The JAMA Forum, July 9, 2019
Analysis of Whole-Exome Sequencing Data for Alzheimer Disease Stratified by APOE Genotype
JAMA Neurology | Original Investigation, June 10, 2019
Next Generation Sequencing—Testing Multiple Genetic Markers at Once
JAMA Oncology | JAMA Oncology Patient Page, May 30, 2019
Emergence of Hybrid Models of Genetic Testing Beyond Direct-to-Consumer or Traditional Labs
JAMA | Viewpoint, May 30, 2019
Molecular Profiling of Hard-to-Treat Childhood and Adolescent Cancers
JAMA Network Open | Original Investigation, April 26, 2019
Estimation of the Required Lipoprotein(a)-Lowering Therapeutic Effect Size for Reduction in Coronary Heart Disease Outcomes: A Mendelian Randomization Analysis
JAMA Cardiology | Brief Report, April 24, 2019
Using Genetics to Plan Future Randomized Trials of Lipoprotein(a) Lowering—How Much Reduction, for How Long, and in Whom?
JAMA Cardiology | Editorial, April 24, 2019
Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing and Potential Loopholes in Protecting Consumer Privacy and Nondiscrimination
JAMA | Viewpoint, April 18, 2019
Quick Uptakes: Taking the Uncertainty Out of Interpreting BRCA Variants
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, March 20, 2019
Hopes, Fears, and Deja Vu Regarding Germline Gene Editing
JAMA Pediatrics | Viewpoint, March 11, 2019
What Parents Need to Know About Genetic Testing
JAMA Pediatrics | JAMA Pediatrics Patient Page, February 25, 2019
Association Between ABCB1 Polymorphisms and Outcomes of Clopidogrel Treatment in Patients With Minor Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack: Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA Neurology | Original Investigation, February 11, 2019
Potential Excessive Testing at Scale: Biomarkers, Genomics, and Machine Learning
JAMA | Viewpoint, February 8, 2019
Clinical Utility of Reinterpreting Previously Reported Genomic Epilepsy Test Results for Pediatric Patients
JAMA Pediatrics | Original Investigation, January 7, 2019
21st-Century Genetics in Psychiatric Residency Training: How Do We Get There?
JAMA Psychiatry | Viewpoint, January 2, 2019
Use of Big Data to Estimate Prevalence of Defective DNA Repair Variants in the US Population
JAMA Dermatology | Original Investigation, January 2019
Association of Genetic Variants Related to Gluteofemoral vs Abdominal Fat Distribution With Type 2 Diabetes, Coronary Disease, and Cardiovascular Risk Factors
JAMA | Original Investigation, December 25, 2018
The Ethics of Heritable Genome Editing: New Considerations in a Controversial Area
JAMA | Viewpoint, December 25, 2018
Need for Automated Interactive Genomic Interpretation and Ongoing Reanalysis
JAMA Pediatrics | Viewpoint, December 2018
Association of Genetic Variants With Warfarin-Associated Bleeding Among Patients of African Descent
JAMA | Preliminary Communication, October 23/30, 2018
Examining How Race, Ethnicity, and Ancestry Data Are Used in Biomedical Research
JAMA | Viewpoint, October 16, 2018
Progress and Innovations in the Management of Adult Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
JAMA Oncology | Review, October 2018
Making Sense of the Genome Remains a Work in Progress
JAMA | Editorial, September 25, 2018
Prevalence of Variant Reclassification Following Hereditary Cancer Genetic Testing
JAMA | Original Investigation, September 25, 2018
Exome Sequencing–Based Screening for BRCA1/2 Expected Pathogenic Variants Among Adult Biobank Participants
JAMA Network Open | Original Investigation, September 21, 2018
Economic Analysis of a Noninvasive Molecular Pathologic Assay for Pigmented Skin Lesions
JAMA Dermatology | Original Investigation, September 2018
Comparison of 2 Treatment Models: Precision Medicine and Preventive Medicine
JAMA | Viewpoint, August 28, 2018
Association of Variants in BAG3 With Cardiomyopathy Outcomes in African American Individuals
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, August 22, 2018
Association of Breast and Ovarian Cancers With Predisposition Genes Identified by Large-Scale Sequencing
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, August 16, 2018
Redefining the Value Proposition of Precision Oncology: Can We Integrate Genomic Testing Without Overselling It?
JAMA Oncology | From The JAMA Network, August 16, 2018
Association of Broad-Based Genomic Sequencing With Survival Among Patients With Advanced Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer in the Community Oncology Setting
JAMA | Original Investigation, August 7, 2018
Associations of Combined Genetic and Lifestyle Risks With Incident Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes in the UK Biobank Study
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, August 2018
Association of Coffee Drinking With Mortality by Genetic Variation in Caffeine Metabolism: Findings From the UK Biobank
JAMA Internal Medicine | Original Investigation, August 2018
Uptake, Results, and Outcomes of Germline Multiple-Gene Sequencing After Diagnosis of Breast Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, August 2018
Variability Among Next-Generation Sequencing Panels for Early-Life Epilepsies
JAMA Pediatrics | Research Letter, August 2018
Estimation of the Percentage of US Patients With Cancer Who Benefit From Genome-Driven Oncology
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, August 2018
On the Marketing and Use of Pharmacogenetic Tests for Psychiatric Treatment
JAMA Psychiatry | Viewpoint, August 2018
Web Platform vs In-Person Genetic Counselor for Return of Carrier Results From Exome Sequencing: A Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA Internal Medicine | Original Investigation, March 2018
Reducing Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Cardiovascular Genetic Testing
JAMA Cardiology | Editorial, February 28, 2018
Genetic Testing for Inherited Cardiac Diseases in Underserved Populations of Non-European Ancestry: Double Disparity
JAMA Cardiology | Viewpoint, February 28, 2018
Association of Racial/Ethnic Categories With the Ability of Genetic Tests to Detect a Cause of Cardiomyopathy
JAMA Cardiology | Brief Report, February 28, 2018
Reducing Overtreatment of Cancer With Precision Medicine: Just What the Doctor Ordered
JAMA | Viewpoint, February 22, 2018
Interpreting Genetic Variants in Titin in Patients With Muscle Disorders
JAMA Neurology | Original Investigation, February 12, 2018
Understanding Titin Variants in the Age of Next-Generation Sequencing—A Titanic Challenge
JAMA Neurology | Editorial, February 12, 2018
Cancer Drugs Approved Based on Biomarkers and Not Tumor Type—FDA Approval of Pembrolizumab for Mismatch Repair-Deficient Solid Cancers
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, February 2018
Toward Precision Approaches for the Prevention and Treatment of Obesity
JAMA | Viewpoint, January 16, 2018
Patient-Paired Sample Congruence Between 2 Commercial Liquid Biopsy Tests
JAMA Oncology | Research Letter, December 14, 2017
Use of Exome Sequencing for Infants in Intensive Care Units: Ascertainment of Severe Single-Gene Disorders and Effect on Medical Management
JAMA Pediatrics | Original Investigation, December 4, 2017
Comparison of Breast Cancer Molecular Features and Survival by African and European Ancestry in The Cancer Genome Atlas
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, December 2017
The Evolution of Patient Diagnosis: From Art to Digital Data-Driven Science
JAMA | Viewpoint, November 21, 2017
Potential of Aqueous Humor as a Surrogate Tumor Biopsy for Retinoblastoma
JAMA Ophthalmology | Original Investigation, November 2017
Association of Mitochondrial DNA Copy Number With Cardiovascular Disease
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, November 2017
Understanding the Genetic Landscape of Small Cell Carcinoma of the Urinary Bladder and Implications for Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Treatment: A Review
JAMA Oncology | Review, November 2017
Use of Exome Sequencing for Infants in Intensive Care Units: Ascertainment of Severe Single-Gene Disorders and Effect on Medical Management
JAMA Pediatrics | Original Investigation, October 2, 2017
A Time to Sequence
JAMA Pediatrics | Editorial, October 2, 2017
Role of Genetic Testing in Inherited Cardiovascular Disease: A Review
JAMA Cardiology | Review, October 2017
Diagnostic Impact and Cost-effectiveness of Whole-Exome Sequencing for Ambulant Children With Suspected Monogenic Conditions
JAMA Pediatrics | Original Investigation, September 2017
Public Response to a Proposed Field Trial of Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes in the United States
JAMA | Research Letter, August 15, 2017
Pilot Programs Seek to Integrate Genomic Data Into Practice
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, August 1, 2017
The Hope and Hype of CRISPR-Cas9 Genome Editing: A Review
JAMA Cardiology | Review, August 2017
Genetic Predisposition to Breast Cancer Due to Mutations Other Than BRCA1 and BRCA2 Founder Alleles Among Ashkenazi Jewish Women
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, July 20, 2017
Pilot Programs Seek to Integrate Genomic Data Into Practice
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, July 12, 2017
Assessment of a Person-Level Risk Calculator to Predict New-Onset Bipolar Spectrum Disorder in Youth at Familial Risk
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, July 5, 2017
Association of Body Mass Index With Cardiometabolic Disease in the UK Biobank: A Mendelian Randomization Study
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, July 5, 2017
Association of a Family History of Atrial Fibrillation With Incidence and Outcomes of Atrial Fibrillation: A Population-Based Family Cohort Study
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, July 5, 2017
No Shortcuts on the Long Road to Evidence-Based Genomic Medicine
JAMA | Viewpoint, July 4, 2017
When "Actionable" Genomic Sequencing Results Cannot Be Acted Upon
JAMA Oncology | Cancer Care Chronicles, July 2017
Precision Psychiatry Meets Network Medicine: Network Psychiatry
JAMA Psychiatry | Viewpoint, July 2017
Comparison of 2 Commercially Available Next-Generation Sequencing Platforms in Oncology
JAMA Oncology | Research Letter, July 2017
Direct-to-Consumer Medical Testing in the Era of Value-Based Care
JAMA | Viewpoint, June 27, 2017
Risks of Breast, Ovarian, and Contralateral Breast Cancer for BRCA1 and BRCA2 Mutation Carriers
JAMA | Original Investigation, June 20, 2017
The Hunt Continues for Early Ovarian Cancer Clues
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, June 14, 2017
The Hope and Hype of CRISPR-Cas9 Genome Editing: A Review
JAMA Cardoiology | Emerging Science for the Clinician, June 14, 2017
Association of Gel-Forming Mucins and Aquaporin Gene Expression With Hearing Loss, Effusion Viscosity, and Inflammation in Otitis Media With Effusion
JAMA Otolaryngology | Original Investigation, June 8, 2017
Unfolding the Clinical Potential of DNA and Protein Origami
JAMA | Bench to Bedside, June 6, 2017
Thrombophilia Testing in Provoked Venous Thromboembolism: A Teachable Moment
JAMA Internal Medicine | Less Is More, June 5, 2017
No Shortcuts on the Long Road to Evidence-Based Genomic Medicine
JAMA | Viewpoint, June 1, 2017
Molecular Profiling of Multiple Primary Merkel Cell Carcinoma to Distinguish Genetically Distinct Tumors From Clonally Related Metastases
JAMA Dermatology | Original Investigation, June 2017
Use of Targeted Therapy in the Treatment of Advanced Cutaneous Cancers
JAMA Dermatology | Editorial, June 2017
Oncolytic Viruses in Cancer Treatment: A Review
JAMA Oncology | Review, June 2017
Toward Responsible Human Genome Editing
JAMA | Viewpoint, May 9, 2017
The Role of Genetic Testing in Patients With Breast Cancer: A Review
JAMA Surgery | Review, April 19, 2017
Adding Protective Genetic Variants to Clinical Reporting of Genomic Screening Results: Restoring Balance
JAMA | Viewpoint, April 18, 2017
Genetics and Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis: What Have We Learned?
JAMA Ophthalmology | Invited Commentary, April 2017
Universal Genetic Testing for Younger Patients With Colorectal Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Editorial, April 2017
More Genetics and Genomics Articles From the JAMA Network
Bad Gene Hunting—Sudden Unexplained Death and Familial Long QT Syndrome
JAMA Cardiology | From the Heart, February 26, 2020
Opportunities and Challenges for Polygenic Risk Scores in Prognostication and Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease
JAMA Cardiology | Editor's Note, February 12, 2020
Be Ready to Talk With Parents About Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing
JAMA Pediatrics | Viewpoint, December 30, 2019
Evaluation of Evidence of Statistical Support and Corroboration of Subgroup Claims in Randomized Clinical Trials
JAMA Internal Medicine | Original Investigation, April 2017
The Challenges of Generating Evidence to Support Precision Medicine
JAMA Internal Medicine | Invited Commentary, April 2017
Mobile Health Interventions for Improving Health Outcomes in Youth: A Meta-analysis
JAMA Pediatrics | Original Investigation, March 20, 2017
Adding Protective Genetic Variants to Clinical Reporting of Genomic Screening Results: Restoring Balance
JAMA | Viewpoint, March 13, 2017
Diagnostic Yield and Novel Candidate Genes by Exome Sequencing in 152 Consanguineous Families With Neurodevelopmental Disorders
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, March 2017
Assessment of Overall Survival, Quality of Life, and Safety Benefits Associated With New Cancer Medicines
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, March 2017
Novel Precision Medicine Trial Designs: Umbrellas and Baskets
JAMA Oncology | JAMA Oncology Patient Page, March 2017
Eradicating a Genetic Mutation
JAMA | A Piece of My Mind, February 28, 2017
Association Between Telomere Length and Risk of Cancer and Non-Neoplastic Diseases: A Mendelian Randomization Study
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, February 23, 2017
Genetic Association of Waist-to-Hip Ratio With Cardiometabolic Traits, Type 2 Diabetes, and Coronary Heart Disease
JAMA | Original Investigation, February 14, 2017
When Will Mendelian Randomization Become Relevant for Clinical Practice and Public Health?
JAMA | Editorial, February 14, 2017
First Drug for Rare Genetic Disease
JAMA | News From the Food and Drug Administration, February 7, 2017
Scientists Discover Off Switch for Genome Editing Technique
JAMA | Lab Reports, February 7, 2017
The Role of Genetic Testing in the Selection of Therapy for Breast Cancer: A Review
JAMA Oncology | Review, February 2017
The Molecular Landscape of Recurrent and Metastatic Head and Neck Cancers: Insights From a Precision Oncology Sequencing Platform
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, February 2017
The Current State of Epigenetic Research in Humans: Promise and Reality
JAMA Pediatrics | Viewpoint, February 2017
The Molecular Landscape of Recurrent and Metastatic Head and Neck Cancers: Insights From a Precision Oncology Sequencing Platform
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, February 2017
Feasibility of Obtaining Measures of Lifestyle From a Smartphone App: The MyHeart Counts Cardiovascular Health Study
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, January 2017
The Effect of Neurological Genomics and Personalized Mitochondrial Medicine
JAMA Neurology | Editorial, January 2017
Comparison of 2 Commercially Available Next-Generation Sequencing Platforms in Oncology
JAMA Oncology | Research Letter, December 15, 2016
Universal Genetic Testing for Younger Patients With Colorectal Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Editorial, December 15, 2016
Approving a Problematic Muscular Dystrophy Drug: Implications for FDA Policy
JAMA | Viewpoint, December 13, 2016
Advances in Sequencing Technologies for Understanding Hereditary Ataxias: A Review
JAMA Neurology | Review, December 2016
A Precision Medicine Approach to Clinical Trials
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, November 15, 2016
Safety and Wound Outcomes Following Genetically Corrected Autologous Epidermal Grafts in Patients With Recessive Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa
JAMA | Preliminary Communication, November 1, 2016
Genome Editing of Monogenic Neuromuscular Diseases: A Systematic Review
JAMA Neurology | Review, November 2016
Genomics- and Transcriptomics-Based Patient Selection for Cancer Treatment With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors: A Review
JAMA Oncology | Review, November 2016
Getting Pharmacogenomics Into the Clinic
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, October 18, 2016
What Happens When Underperforming Big Ideas in Research Become Entrenched?
JAMA | Viewpoint, October 4, 2016
Will Precision Medicine Improve Population Health?
JAMA | Viewpoint, October 4, 2016
ESR1 Mutations in Cell-Free DNA of Breast Cancer: Predictive “Tip of the Iceberg”
JAMA | Invited Commentary, October 2016
Prevalence of ESR1 Mutations in Cell-Free DNA and Outcomes in Metastatic Breast Cancer: A Secondary Analysis of the BOLERO-2 Clinical Trial
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, October 2016
Synthetic Nucleic Acids and Treatment of Neurological Diseases
JAMA Neurology | Clinical Implications of Basic Neuroscience Research, October 2016
Synthetic Nucleic Acids and Treatment of Neurological Diseases
JAMA Neurology | Clinical Implications of Basic Neuroscience Research, October 2016
New Reasons to Pursue the Therapeutic Potential of Synthetic Nucleic Acids for Neurological Diseases
JAMA Neurology | Editorial, October 2016
Therapeutic and Preventive Implications of Moonshot in Hereditary Cancer Syndromes
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, September 8, 2016
Researchers Develop Tissue-Engineered Cartilage
JAMA | Lab Reports, September 6, 2016
Diagnostic Test Accuracy of a 2-Transcript Host RNA Signature for Discriminating Bacterial vs Viral Infection in Febrile Children
JAMA | Preliminary Communication, August 23, 2016
Genetics and the Evaluation of the Febrile Child
JAMA | Editorial, August 23, 2016
Association of RNA Biosignatures With Bacterial Infections in Febrile Infants Aged 60 Days or Younger
JAMA | Preliminary Communication, August 23, 2016
Genomic Analysis of Plasma Cell-Free DNA in Patients With Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, August 18, 2016
Where to Draw the Boundaries for Prenatal Carrier Screening
JAMA | Editorial, August 16, 2016
Modeled Fetal Risk of Genetic Diseases Identified by Expanded Carrier Screening
JAMA | Original Investigation, August 16, 2016
Modeled Fetal Risk of Genetic Diseases Identified by Expanded Carrier Screening
JAMA | Original Investigation, August 16, 2016
Assay Detects Drug-Resistance Genes
JAMA | News From the Food and Drug Administration, August 16, 2016
National Academies Hit the Brakes on Gene Drive–Modified Organisms
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, August 2, 2016
Prospective Validation of Rapid Plasma Genotyping for the Detection of EGFR and RAS Mutations in Advanced Lung Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, August 2016
Prospective Validation of Rapid Plasma Genotyping for the Detection of EGFR and KRAS Mutations in Advanced Lung Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, August 2016
Clinical Application of Liquid Biopsies
JAMA Oncology | Editorial, August 2016
A Digital Health Intervention to Lower Cardiovascular Risk: A Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA Cardiology | Brief Report, August 2016
Preventing Mitochondrial DNA Diseases: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back
JAMA | Viewpoint, July 19, 2016
Wearable Biosensors Studied for Clinical Monitoring and Treatment
JAMA | Medical News & Perspectives, July 19, 2016
Liquid Biopsy Receives Approval
JAMA | News From the Food and Drug Administration, July 19, 2016
Tumor Screening and DNA Testing in the Diagnosis of Lynch Syndrome
JAMA | JAMA Diagnostic Test Interpretation, July 5, 2016
Association Between CYP2C19 Loss-of-Function Allele Status and Efficacy of Clopidogrel for Risk Reduction Among Patients With Minor Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack
JAMA | Original Investigation, July 5, 2016
Association of HLA Genetic Risk Burden With Disease Phenotypes in Multiple Sclerosis
JAMA Neurology | Original Investigation, July 2016
Linking Genotype to Clinical Phenotype in Multiple Sclerosis: In Search of the Holy Grail
JAMA Neurology | Editorial, July 2016
Blood-Based Screening for Colon Cancer: A Disruptive Innovation or Simply a Disruption?
JAMA | Viewpoint, June 21, 2016
Exome Sequencing of Familial Bipolar Disorder
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, June 2016
Universal Genomic Testing Needed to Win the War Against Cancer: Genomics IS the Diagnosis
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, June 2016
The Prospects for Cardiovascular Proteomics: A Glass Approaching Half Full
JAMA Cardiology | Viewpoint, June 2016
No Solid Evidence, Only Hollow Argument for Universal Tumor Sequencing: Show Me the Data
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, June 2016
Neurologist Comfort in the Use of Next-Generation Sequencing Diagnostics: Current State and Future Prospects
JAMA Neurology | Viewpoint, June 2016
Do It Yourself Newborn Screening
JAMA Pediatrics | Viewpoint, June 2016
Association of DNA Methylation Differences With Schizophrenia in an Epigenome-Wide Association Study
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, May 2016
Diagnostic Yield of Clinical Tumor and Germline Whole-Exome Sequencing for Children With Solid Tumors
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, May 2016
Multicenter Feasibility Study of Tumor Molecular Profiling to Inform Therapeutic Decisions in Advanced Pediatric Solid Tumors: The Individualized Cancer Therapy (iCat) Study
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, May 2016
Precision Therapy for Pediatric Cancers
JAMA Oncology | Editorial, May 2016
Intracoronary Gene Transfer of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Patients With Heart Failure: A Randomized Clinical Trial
JAMA Cardiology | Original Investigation, May 2016
Multicenter Feasibility Study of Tumor Molecular Profiling to Inform Therapeutic Decisions in Advanced Pediatric Solid Tumors: The Individualized Cancer Therapy (iCat) Study
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, May 2016
Development and Validation of a Prediction Rule for Benefit and Harm of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Beyond 1 Year After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
JAMA | Original Investigation, April 26, 2016
Moving From Clinical Trials to Precision Medicine: The Role for Predictive Modeling
JAMA | Editorial, April 26, 2016
Precision Medicine: Personalized Proteomics for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Idiopathic Inflammatory Disease
JAMA Ophthalmology | Brief Report, April 2016
How MicroRNAs Are Involved in Splitting the Mind
JAMA Psychiatry | Neuroscience and Psychiatry, April 2016
Clinical Genomics: From Pathogenicity Claims to Quantitative Risk Estimates
JAMA | Viewpoint, March 22, 2016
Antisense Oligonucleotides for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Why No Neurologist Should Skip This
JAMA Neurology | Viewpoint, March 2016
A Cross-Disorder Method to Identify Novel Candidate Genes for Developmental Brain Disorders
JAMA Psychiatry | Original Investigation, March 2016
Precision Medicine and Low- to Middle-Income Countries
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, March 2016
Integrating Cadaver Exome Sequencing Into a First-Year Medical Student Curriculum
JAMA | Viewpoint, February 9, 2016
Genetic Incidentaloma in Ophthalmology
JAMA Ophthalmology | Viewpoint, February 2016
An Adjuvant Role for Mobile Health in Psychiatry
JAMA Psychiatry | Viewpoint, February 2016
Applicability of Smartphone-Based Screening Programs
JAMA Ophthalmology | Invited Commentary, February 2016
Clinical Validation of a Smartphone-Based Adapter for Optic Disc Imaging in Kenya
JAMA Ophthalmology | Original Investigation, February 2016
Ushering Hypertension Into a New Era of Precision Medicine
JAMA | Viewpoint, January 26, 2016
Circulating Tumor DNA Helps Track Cancer
JAMA | Lab Reports, January 5, 2016
Association of Arrhythmia-Related Genetic Variants With Phenotypes Documented in Electronic Medical Records
JAMA | Original Investigation, January 5, 2016
Next-Generation Sequencing in Oncology in the Era of Precision Medicine
JAMA Oncology | Viewpoint, January 2016
Next-Generation Sequencing for the Identification of Targetable Molecular Alterations in Cancer
JAMA Oncology | JAMA Oncology Diagnostic Test Interpretation, January 2016
Identification and Construction of Combinatory Cancer Hallmark–Based Gene Signature Sets to Predict Recurrence and Chemotherapy Benefit in Stage II Colorectal Cancer
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, January 2016
Germline Variants in Targeted Tumor Sequencing Using Matched Normal DNA
JAMA Oncology | Original Investigation, January 2016