Genetics101 for Healthcare Providers
(62)

This course is primarily for the non-geneticist healthcare professional.

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Availability
On-Demand
10 Courses
Expires on 03/31/2025
Cost
$0.00
Credit Offered
5 CME (AMA) Credits
5 CME (Other) Credits

 

Date of Release: 3/1/2022

Expiration Date: 3/31/2025

Credits offered: 0.5 per module

Estimated time for completion: 5 hours

Course/Module must be completed by the expiration date

 

This course is supported by an independent medical education grant from Illumina, Inc.

 

The unprecedented, rapid advances in genetic and genomic knowledge, information and technologies have made it challenging for primary care and other nongenetics health care providers to stay current on recommendations and practices in clinical genetics. To address this education gap for nongenetics providers and to foster the effective integration of these advances into the broad clinical practice of primary care and specialty health care providers, the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) has created a formal online accredited continuing education offering, “ACMG Genetics101 for Healthcare Providers.” In each module of the course, a board-certified medical genetics expert will provide a case-based presentation, along with supporting reading materials.

Modules include:

  1. Neurogenetics
  2. Prenatal Genetics
  3. Online Genetics Resources
  4. Inherited Cancer Syndromes
  5. Genetics for the Primary Care Provider (Adult)
  6. Genetics for Endocrinologists
  7. General Overview of Genetics
  8. Key Principles in Pharmacogenomics
  9. Genetics for Cardiologists
  10. Genetics Workup for the Pediatrician


Target Audience:

This course is primarily for the non-genetics healthcare professionals.

 

Overall Learning Objectives:

At the conclusion of this series, participants should be able to:

  • Obtain and interpret a comprehensive three-generation family history.
  • Appropriately order genetic tests.
  • Appropriately refer a patient for genetic evaluation.
  • Interpret genetic test results.
  • Recognize the genetic conditions prevalent in their specialty.

 

NCC Funding Acknowledgement
Educaitonal certificates are supported by NCC who receives funding from the Health Resources and Services Admininstration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) under Cooperative Agreement #UH9MC30770 from 6/2020-5/2024 for $800,000 per award year. This information or content and conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be inferred by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government. 


Neurogenetics101  Go To Module


Prenatal Genetics101  Go To Module


Online Genetics Resources101   Go To Module


Inherited Cancer Syndromes 101  Go To Module


Genetics101 for the Primary Care Provider (Adult)  Go To Module


Genetics101 for Endocrinologists  Go To Module


General Overview of Genetics101   Go To Module


Key Principles in Pharmacogenomics101  Go To Module


Genetics101 for Cardiologists  Go To Module


Genetics101 Workup for the Pediatrician  Go To Module

Neurogenetics101

 

Fuki M. Hisama, MD, FAAN, FACMG
Professor, University of Washington

 

Fuki M. Hisama is Professor of Medical Genetics and Adjunct Professor of Neurology at the University of Washington in Seattle.  She is a graduate of the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, completed her Internal Medicine internship at Northwestern Memorial Hospital, and her Neurology residency at Yale New Haven Hospital, where she served as Chief Resident.  She completed research and clinical fellowships in Human and Medical Genetics at Yale.

She joined the faculty of the Yale Department of Neurology, where she founded the Adult Neurogenetics Clinic. She moved to Boston Children’s Hospital where she was an attending clinical geneticist specializing in pediatric neurogenetics. For the past 12 years, she has been the medical director of the University of Washington Adult Genetic Medicine Clinic, which serves a 5 state region, and she is also the Program Director of the accredited residency in Clinical Genetics and Genomics and Co-PI of an NIH funded T32 postdoctoral Genetics fellowship. 

Dr. Hisama has a national reputation as a clinician, scholar and educator in Clinical Genetics and Neurogenetics. She has co-authored over 90 peer reviewed publications, and been interviewed by multiple media outlets including Discover magazine and National Public Radio. She is a lead clinician for the Pacific Northwest Undiagnosed Diseases Clinical Site, and has served in multiple national leadership roles for the Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education, the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics, the Board of Directors of the American Board of Medical Genetics and Genomics, and served as Section Chair of the American Academy of Neurology’s Neurogenetics Special Interest Group. She has earned an award from UW School of Medicine for her mentorship of underrepresented faculty and trainees, and in 2020, she received an award for outstanding research mentorship of medical students.

Prenatal Genetics101

Susan Klugman MD, FACMG, FACOG
Director, Reproductive and Medical Genetics
Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine

 

Dr. Klugman is currently the Director of the Division of Reproductive and Medical Genetics. Her clinical practice focuses on prenatal and cancer genetics. She is also the Program Director for the Clinical Medical Genetics Residency that spans both the Department of Pediatrics and the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Women's Health. Dr. Klugman graduated from Cornell University with a BS with honors in Biometry and Statistics. She then earned her MD from New York University School of Medicine. Dr. Klugman completed her Ob/GYN and Clinical Genetics training at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine/Montefiore Medical Center. She practiced as an Ob/GYN generalist for 10 years and served as the medical director of the Larchmont Women’s Center before completing her genetics training. Dr. Klugman, a Professor of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Women's Health, is Board Certified in both Clinical Genetics and Obstetrics/Gynecology

Online Genetics Resources101

 

Anne O’Donnell-Luria, MD, PhD, FACMG
Assistant Professor
Boston Children’s Hospital, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and Harvard Medical School

 

Anne O'Donnell-Luria is an Assistant Professor in Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School who leads a research group at Boston Children’s Hospital and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. She completed her M.D./Ph.D. training at Columbia University Medical Center followed by the Five-Year Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School Combined Pediatrics-Genetics Residency Program, an additional year of clinical training in medical biochemical genetics, and postdoctoral training in the MacArthur laboratory at the Broad Institute and Massachusetts General Hospital. She has leadership roles in many national and international efforts in rare disease research including the GREGoR consortium, the gnomAD consortium, the NeuroDev project, AnVIL, CAGI, and the Syndromic Disorders GCEP in ClinGen. Her research focuses on using large-scale genomic and transcriptomic approaches to increase the rate of rare disease diagnosis through improving rare variant interpretation, empowering the discovery of novel disease genes, and understanding the mechanisms of incomplete penetrance. She is a board-certified physician in pediatrics, clinical genetics, and medical biochemical genetics and directs the EpiChroma Clinic at Boston Children’s Hospital focused on evaluating families with Mendelian chromatin disorders such as Kleefstra syndrome.

Inherited Cancer Syndromes101

 

Tuya Pal, MD, FACMG
Professor of Medicine (Genetic Medicine)
Associate Director, Cancer Health Disparities
Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

 

Dr. Pal is a board-certified clinical geneticist based at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center and is the Associate Director of Cancer Health Disparities at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center. Her research is focused on identification of genetic risk factors that place individuals at a higher risk for cancer, as well as strategies to reduce this risk. These efforts have included a focus on underserved populations, particularly young Black women with breast cancer. She has also led multiple efforts to better understand the provision of clinical cancer genetic services across diverse populations, healthcare settings, and providers, at both the patient and provider level. The focus of her clinical activities has encompassed evaluation of patients referred for genetic risk assessment for inherited cancer predisposition. She has served as a panel member of the NCCN guidelines committee (for hereditary breast/ovarian cancer) since 2009 as well as a member of the NCI Cancer Genetics PDQ.

Genetics101 for the Primary Care Provider (Adult)

 

Shweta Dhar, MD, MS, FACMG, FACP (Course Director)

Medical Director, Adult Genetics Section

Baylor College of Medicine

Chief, Genetics Section

Michael E. Debakey VA Medical Center

 

Dr. Shweta U. Dhar, Professor of Molecular and Human Genetics is the Director of the Adult Genetics section at Baylor College of Medicine, Chief of Genetics at the Michael E. Debakey VA Medical Center in Houston, TX and VISN16 Lead for Genomic Medicine and is board certified in both Internal Medicine and Medical Genetics. She completed her residency in Pathology from the Gujarat Cancer & Research Institute in Ahmedabad, INDIA, and she moved to the U.S. to complete a Master’s degree in Biotechnology from Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, TX and subsequently a residency in Internal medicine from New York. After completing a fellowship in Medical Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX, she joined as faculty at Baylor and has been practicing clinical genetics since 2008. In addition to her clinical role, she also serves as the course director for Medical Genetics and is the past Director of the Genetics & Genomics Pathway for the medical students at Baylor. In recognition of her educational and clinical endeavors, she has been awarded the Norton Rose Fulbright award for Teaching & Evaluation and for Educational Leadership as well as the Rising Star Clinician award and the Clark Faculty service award at Baylor. Dr. Dhar is a member and past Chair of the ACMG Adult Genetics Special Interest Group that she led from 2013-2019 as well as a member of the ACMG Education Committee.  Dr. Dhar has also been responsible for launching the Adult Genetics Diagnostic Dilemma session in 2016, which has now become a permanent feature of the annual ACMG meeting. Recently, she has been elected as clinical director on the ACMG Board of Directors.

Genetics101 for Endocrinologists

 

Salman Kirmani MBBS, FABP, FACMG

Associate Professor & Chair,  

Division of Women & Child Health, Aga Khan University, Karachi

Consultant Pediatric Endocrinologist & Medical Geneticist

 

Dr. Salman Kirmani is a Medical Geneticist & Pediatric Endocrinologist associated with Aga Khan University as an Associate Professor of Paediatrics and Medicine, Chair (Division of Women & Child Health), and Interim Chair (Department of Paediatrics & Child Health). Dr. Kirmani did his MBBS (MD) from Dow Medical College, Karachi followed by Residency & Fellowships from Mayo School of Graduate Medical Education, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. Dr. Kirmani is certified by the American Board of Medical Genetics (Clinical Genetics), and the American Board of Pediatrics (General Pediatrics & Pediatric Endocrinology). He was on faculty at the Mayo Clinic till he returned to Pakistan to join the Aga Khan University in 2014.

Dr. Kirmani has a rich and diverse experience in education, clinical service, research and advocacy. He has authored over 50 peer-reviewed articles and two book chapters, and is part of numerous well-funded research studies in his field. He has won a number of teaching awards, and has successfully trained Pakistan’s first genetic counselor, Ms. Fizza Akbar. Together with his multidisciplinary team at AKU, he has developed a Pediatric Genetics Clinic, Hereditary Cancer Clinic, Adult Neurogenetics Clinic, and a Perinatal Genetics Clinic, the first of their kind in Pakistan. He is on the board of a number of parent support groups for rare genetic disorders, including the Karachi Down Syndrome Program, and DEBRA Pakistan. He continually strives to make the advances in Genetics and Genomics accessible to people in Pakistan, and create a team of healthcare professionals who may deliver Precision Medicine solutions to populations with the highest burden of genetic disorders.

General Overview of Genetics101

 

Ben Solomon, MD, FACMG
Clinical Director, National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), National Institutes of Health (NIH)

 

Dr. Solomon has a medical degree from Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. He completed medical training in pediatrics and clinical genetics through a joint Children’s National/National Human Genome Research Institute program. After completing this program, Dr. Solomon remained at NHGRI for several years as a Staff Clinician; his work focused on understanding the causes and biology of a number of congenital disorders as well as applying emerging technologies and analytic approaches to genomic and phenotypic datasets in order to ask a variety of clinically-relevant research questions.

Dr. Solomon joined the Inova Translational Medicine Institute (ITMI) in 2013 as the Chief of the Division of Medical Genomics. In this role, Dr. Solomon led a team of clinicians, bioinformaticists, and bench-based scientists to deliver clinical care and conduct genomic research. In 2016, Dr. Solomon became the Managing Director of GeneDx, a genetics/genomics diagnostic company with a strong emphasis on research and the discovery of novel causes of disease. In this role, which he held until returning to NHGRI as Clinical Director in 2019, he led a team of over 400 molecular geneticists, genetic counselors, and laboratory and research staff. Throughout his entire career, he has always continued to be an avid participant in clinical genomics education, including formal and informal teaching of medical students, residents, fellows, postdoctoral and other trainees, as well as re-educating the existing clinical and scientific workforce about genomics. Additionally, since 2017, Dr. Solomon served as deputy editor-in-chief and then editor-in-chief for the American Journal of Medical Genetics. He has authored and co-authored more than 140 publications. His research interests involve determining the broad implications of human genomic health, including the development and application of high-throughput and novel related technologies to help predict health outcomes and study the causes and optimal management of both rare and common diseases; his research group at NHGRI especially focuses on the application of artificial intelligence to questions about medical genetics.

Key Principles in Pharmacogenomics101

 

Aniwaa Owusu Obeng, PharmD
Assistant Professor, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Dr. Aniwaa Owusu Obeng is a faculty member of the Charles Bronfman Institute for Personalized Medicine and an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Medicine and Genetics and Genomics Sciences at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS) in New York, USA. She also has an appointment in The Mount Sinai Hospital as the Clinical Pharmacogenomics Coordinator. Dr. Obeng joined Mount Sinai in July 2013 and has been spearheading clinical pharmacogenomics implementation efforts in Mount Sinai’s outpatient clinics ever since. As part of this initiative, physicians are trained to use genetic information to inform their prescribing decisions for approximately 2000 preemptively genotyped patients and counting. She has also led the development of provider and patient educational materials and tools on pharmacogenomics as part of this effort. Moreover, Dr. Owusu Obeng directs clinical pharmacogenomics rotations for PGY1 and PGY2 pharmacy residents in the Mount Sinai Health System and Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience (APPE) rotation for final year student pharmacists.

Dr. Owusu Obeng obtained her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from the Albany College of Pharmacy and Health

Sciences in Albany, NY. She then pursued a clinical residency (PGY1) in general pharmacy practice at the BronxLebanon Hospital Center in Bronx, NY, and subsequently, PGY2 at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy and UF Health Shands Hospital in Gainesville, Florida. As the inaugural resident in the UF Health Personalized Medicine Program, Dr. Owusu Obeng specialized in Pharmacogenomics and Drug Information. Dr. Obeng has published over 30 peer-reviewed manuscripts and book chapters on pharmacogenomics and precision medicine. She is a guideline writing member of the Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC); member of the Pharmacogenomics Working Group in the NIH/NHGRI – funded IGNITE (Implementing Genomics in Practice) Network; 2017 ISMMS Leadership Emerging in Academic Departments (LEAD) Scholar; and a member and 2017 MERIT Scholar of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP). Her research interests mainly lie in bridging the gap between discovery of genetic determinants of therapeutic response and clinical implementation by developing best practice processes to effectively adopt genomic medicine into everyday clinical practice.

Genetics101 for Cardiologists

 

Amy E. Roberts, MD, FACMG
Department of Cardiology & Division of Genetics, Department of Pediatrics
Boston Children’s Hospital

 

Dr. Roberts obtained her M.D. degree from Dartmouth Medical School in Hanover, NH.  Following Pediatrics residency at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, she completed a second residency in medical genetics at Harvard Medical School.  In 2007 she joined the Department of Cardiology at Boston Children’s Hospital to direct clinical cardiovascular genetic research and to work in the cardiovascular genetics clinic caring for children with a variety of syndromic and isolated genetically acquired congenital heart diseases and cardiomyopathies. 

 

Dr. Roberts’s research work has focused on RASoapthies: gene discovery and genotype phenotype correlations, genetic etiologies of childhood onset cardiomyopathies, and genetic etiology and phenotypic spectrum of isolated and syndromic congenital heart disease.

Genetics101 Workup for the Pediatrician

 

Chester W. Brown, MD, PhD
Professor and Genetics Division Chief
Department of Pediatrics
LeBonheur Children’s Hospital
The University of Tennessee Health Science Center

 

Dr. Brown is the St. Jude Chair of Excellence in Genetics, and Professor and Division Chief of Genetics at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital where he was recruited to help develop precision medicine initiatives in the Memphis community. His clinical interests include a variety of rare genetic syndromes in children and adults with a research emphasis on rare genetic disorders that have severe, early onset obesity as a feature. He completed his undergraduate degree at Howard University followed by MD/PhD training at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. His postdoctoral and subsequent faculty roles were in Pediatrics and Medical Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine. He has more than 25 years’ clinical experience with pediatric and adult Medical Genetics patients, representing a broad spectrum of conditions. He is a member of the Society for Pediatric Research, served for 6 years as a member of an NIH study section and on 2 committees for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. He also directs a basic science research laboratory and the Biorepository and Integrative Genomics Initiative at UTHSC/Le Bonheur. He has continued clinical practice throughout his career and has never lost sight of the fundamental importance of careful observation and listening carefully to patients.

 

Appreciation is expressed to the 2019 summer pre-pandemic planning group:

Shweta Dhar, MD, MS, FACMG, FACP      Course Director

Donna Messersmith, PhD                          Education and Community Involvement Branch, Division of Genomics and Society, National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health

Kara Pappas, MD, FACMG                          Children’s Hospital of Michigan

Aditi Parikh, MD, FACMG                           University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Jane Radford, MHA, CHCP                         ACMG Education Program

Amy Roberts, MD, FACMG                         Boston Children’s Hospital

Anne Slavotinek, MBBS, PhD, FACMG     University of California, San Francisco, UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital

Accredited Continuing Education Financial Disclosure

The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide Accredited Continuing Education (ACE) for physicians. ACMG is an organization committed to improvement of patient care and general health by the incorporation of genetics and genomics into clinical practice.

ACMG has implemented the following procedures to ensure the independence of ACE activities from commercial influence/promotional bias. The Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) requires that providers (ACMG) must be able to demonstrate that: 1) everyone in a position to control the content of an ACE activity has disclosed all financial relationships that they have had in the past 24 months with ineligible* companies; 2) ACMG has implemented a mechanism to mitigate relevant financial relationships; and 3) all relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies are disclosed to the learners before the beginning of the educational activity. The learners must also be informed if no relevant financial relationships exist.
*Ineligible companies are defined as those whose primary business is producing, marketing, selling, re-selling, or distributing healthcare products used by or on patients.

ACMG Education Policies

Please review the policies below regarding the ACMG Education program

 

Financial Disclosures

The following course director, program planning committee members, speakers, and staff for this activity, have no financial relationships with ineligible companies relevant to the content of this course.

Name

Role(s)

 

Contributors in alphabetic order

Planning Member

Faculty/ Presenter

Peer Reviewer

Financial Disclosure

Chester W. Brown, MD, PhD

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Shweta Dhar, MD, MS, FACMG, FACP (Course Director)

Nothing to disclose

Fuki M. Hisama, MD, FAAN, FACMG

Nothing to disclose

 

Susan Klugman MD, FACMG, FACOG

 

Nothing to disclose

Salman Kirmani MBBS, FABP, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Donna Messersmith, PhD

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Anne O’Donnell-Luria, MD, PhD, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Aniwaa Owusu Obeng, PharmD

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Tuya Pal, MD, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Kara Pappas, MD, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Aditi Parikh, MD, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Amy E. Roberts, MD, FACMG

 

Nothing to disclose

Jane Radford, MHA, CHCP

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Ben Solomon, MD, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose

Anne Slavotinek, MBBS, PhD, FACMG

 

 

Nothing to disclose



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