Litcius/Paper detail

Of Screening, Stratification, and Scores

Bartha Maria Knoppers, Alexander Bernier, Palmira Granados Moreno, Nora Pashayan

2021Journal of Personalized Medicine35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Technological innovations including risk-stratification algorithms and large databases of longitudinal population health data and genetic data are allowing us to develop a deeper understanding how individual behaviors, characteristics, and genetics are related to health risk. The clinical implementation of risk-stratified screening programmes that utilise risk scores to allocate patients into tiers of health risk is foreseeable in the future. Legal and ethical challenges associated with risk-stratified cancer care must, however, be addressed. Obtaining access to the rich health data that are required to perform risk-stratification, ensuring equitable access to risk-stratified care, ensuring that algorithms that perform risk-scoring are representative of human genetic diversity, and determining the appropriate follow-up to be provided to stratification participants to alert them to changes in their risk score are among the principal ethical and legal challenges. Accounting for the great burden that regulatory requirements could impose on access to risk-scoring technologies is another critical consideration.

Topics & Concepts

Risk stratificationPopulation stratificationRisk assessmentStratification (seeds)Health careActuarial scienceRisk analysis (engineering)MedicineEnvironmental healthComputer scienceBusinessEconomicsBiologyGerminationCardiologyEconomic growthBotanyDormancyBiochemistrySeed dormancySingle-nucleotide polymorphismGenotypeGeneComputer securityGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningBRCA gene mutations in cancerColorectal Cancer Screening and Detection