International Common Disease Alliance releases action plan to drive next phase of genetic understanding of common disease

Report defines priorities, proposes international collaborations to accelerate progress from genetic maps to biological mechanisms to medical treatments

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A group of more than 150 scientists and stakeholders from six continents have created a plan to accelerate the understanding and treatment of common diseases — such as diabetes, schizophrenia, heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and many more —  by developing ways to drive systematic progress from Maps to Mechanisms to Medicine (M2M2M).

The International Common Disease Alliance (ICDA), a consortium that includes scientists from both academia and industry, today released two reports:

  • The ICDA White Paper describes progress over the past two decades to use genetics to systematically understand the biological basis of common diseases — which has led to the discovery of more than 70,000 robust associations between specific genetic regions and human diseases, and led to the identification of many new disease genes and mechanisms — and outlines remaining barriers to progress — including the current difficulty in connecting genetic variants to the target genes, cell types, and biological pathways in which they act.
  • The ICDA Recommendations report proposes specific actions — concerning international collaborations, data resources, critical infrastructure, policy needs, and equity considerations — to overcome the barriers to progress.

To help implement the ambitious goals, the ICDA has established eight expert Working Groups, which will work with the international scientific community and funders, to jump-start priority projects, policies, and activities.

“There are many promising efforts around the world to bridge genetics and disease biology. In developing these Recommendations and White Paper, ICDA has sought to act as a convener — providing a venue for conceiving ideas, developing plans, and, where appropriate, coordinating across individual projects to make progress.”

Cecilia Lindgren, professor of genomic endocrinology and metabolism at the University of Oxford

Lindgren is a co-chair of the ICDA Organizing Committee, which consists of 35 members representing 15 countries and five continents. The other co-chair is Eric Lander, president and founding director of the Broad Institute.

ICDA was formally launched in September 2019 at an international meeting near Washington DC co-hosted by the US National Institutes of Health, following nearly a year of planning by scientists around the world. It brings together the international scientific community —  across academia, medicine, biopharma companies, tech companies, and biomedical funders — to conceive collaborative efforts to drive progress and develop clear plans for consideration by researchers and funders, including ongoing engagement with NIH. ICDA itself is not intended to decide or fund projects.

“The ICDA is a truly global effort to accelerate the understanding of the causes and mechanisms of common disease. Its ambitious goal is to decipher the relationship between genetic variation and disease processes through the systematic application of powerful genomic analysis, and ultimately to translate this understanding into patient’s benefit. To achieve this goal, we will need to harness the collective knowledge of scientists around the globe, and we will do so through the creation of a highly collaborative and inclusive research network and the development of platforms for rapid exchange of data and knowledge.”

Professor Nicole Soranzo, Senior Group Leader at Wellcome Sanger Institute, and member of the Organising Committee for ICDA

“In this blueprint for the next major advances in the genetics of common disease, the ICDA has brought together two critical engines for discovery: advanced research and international collaboration, ICDA’s goals carry the promise of improving the health status of peoples across the world.”

Francis Collins, Director of the National Institutes of Health

“ICDA is an incredibly timely and well placed effort, bringing together a range of stakeholders from different communities, to accelerate the progress from genetic discovery to therapeutic strategies. I am delighted to see the development of international efforts such as ICDA that are well-aligned with ongoing efforts in the UK, and especially with the vision of the Life Sciences Offices.”

Sir John Bell, Regius Professor of Medicine at the University of Oxford and Chairman of the Office for Strategic Coordination of Health Research in the United Kingdom

The ICDA Recommendations report contains specific recommendations in key priority directions:

  • Flagship Disease Projects. As an overarching effort, ICDA proposes that flagship disease projects be launched for at least 10 common diseases — with each serving as testbeds for new approaches and for regularly assessing progress in the ability to translate genetic findings to disease pathways.
  • Biobanks. Prospective biobanks with extensive genetic and phenotypic information from participants are emerging as a key resource for M2M2M efforts. ICDA urges efforts to expand the breadth of biobanks, including increasing ancestry diversity by creating new biobanks in Africa, the Americas, and Asia and driving best practices to create biobanks within existing medical systems.
  • Expanding genetic resources. ICDA describes the needs for foundational genetic resources to support M2M2M efforts — including projects to drive comprehensive discovery of genetic variation around the globe, to make catalogs of genetic results that are maximally useful for the scientific community, and to support genetic analysis among biobanks across the globe.
  • Cellular Mechanisms. ICDA proposes the launch of three bold foundational projects that are key to understanding the cellular role of genetic variants in human disease — including systematically mapping all regulatory elements to their target genes; identifying all cellular regulatory programs; and systematically characterizing all common protein-coding variants.
  • Medicine. While foundational resources are important, disease-specific approaches are critical for developing therapies for specific diseases and improving clinical care. To accelerate such efforts, ICDA proposes efforts to advance methods for developing disease-specific functional assays, biomarkers, and genomically informed clinical trials.
  • Data Platforms. A federated ecosystem of software and data resources will be crucial for enabling storage, curation, access, analysis, and dissemination of data and results for use by the global community. ICDA proposes specific efforts including the development of the open-source data platforms, data portals, and gold-standard datasets.
  • Policies and Ethics. ICDA proposes activities to develop well-crafted policies to promote data sharing, protect participants, comply with national regulations, and respect cultural perspectives and ethics.
  • Global Equity. ICDA supports efforts to ensure global inclusion and equitable access to drive, participate in, and benefit from scientific research toward M2M2M.

“In today’s international environment, scientific forums are essential to connect the parallel efforts of researchers globally, so that we may learn from and build upon all initiatives. Thus, I am delighted to be a part of ICDA’s efforts to drive progress in common genetic diseases.”

Nancy Ip, Vice President for Research and Development and Morningside Professor of Life Sciences at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

ICDA’s intentional focus on international collaboration and commitment to global equity were also noted by Iscia Lopes-Cendes, Professor of Medical Genetics at the University of Campinas, Brazil, and chair of the Steering Committee for the Brazilian Initiative on Precision Medicine (BIPMed), who said, “It’s incredibly important for lower- and middle-income countries to participate actively in scientific research. ICDA’s focus on ethical and equitable implementation of its recommendations is crucial to realize the benefits of scientific findings for people around the world, especially the diverse populations represented in South America.”

“The development of high-quality biobanks among the diverse populations on the African continent will be imperative to realize the benefits of genetic discovery for addressing common endemic diseases. ICDA’s goals to support local development of these resources is a welcome proposal to engage communities around the world in their efforts to make progress that will benefit these communities.”

Nicola Mulder, Professor and Head of Computational Biology Division at the University of Cape Town and Principal Investigator of H3Africa BioNet

Join the discussion by following @ICDAbio on Twitter and signing up for membership at https://www.icda.bio/membership-signup.

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