Joshua Denny, M.D., M.S.

Adjunct Investigator

Center for Precision Health Research

NHGRI

Building 50, Room 4308
50 South Drive
Bethesda, MD 20892

301-594-9402

joshua.denny@nih.gov

Research Topics

Dr. Denny's laboratory seeks to discover gene-disease relationships by gathering, assessing, and analyzing the human phenome across genomics and environmental exposures. With this mission in mind, those in the Precision Health Informatics Section primarily repurpose health records as a source of longitudinal phenotype information and use links to genomic and other data. We partner with researchers to create trans-initiative resources cataloguing genetic associations across phenotypes.

The Precision Health Informatics Section relies on large scale data and bioinformatics approaches to more effectively characterize and identify genetic diseases. Electronic Health Records (EHRs), which typically include hospital billing codes, laboratory and vital signs, provider documentation, reports and tests, and medication records, are the major source of data for the laboratory. Over the years, studies have demonstrated that genetic analyses evaluating EHRs typically have larger sample sizes, are more cost-effective, and provide more opportunities for broad-ranging longitudinal investigations. In light of these facts, EHRs have become a powerful resource to illuminate shared genetic architecture across diseases through the development of genome-wide association studies (GWAS), phenome-wide association studies (PheWAS), transcriptome wide association studies (TWAS) and colocalization analyses, pharmacogenomic investigations, polygenic risk scores (PRS), phenotype risk scores (PheRS), Mendelian randomization (MR), biogeographic ancestry modeling, and exploration of the impact of rare disease variants. GWAS evaluates the association of millions of genetic variants with a particular disease while PheWAS examines the range of diseases associated with a particular genetic variant (or other analyte) to identify potentially pleiotropic relationships. These types of approaches, combined with biomedical and functional genomic informatics resources as well as innovative statistical modeling techniques, can elucidate genomic architecture of disease, common biological mechanisms underlying disease development and progression, and clinically relevant therapeutic targets.

Currently, the laboratory harnesses data from large scale biorepositories such as the eMERGE (Electronic Medical Records and Genetics) Network, BioVU, UK Biobank, Million Veteran Program (MVP), and All of Us . A common project for those in Dr. Denny's group is to analyze complex datasets incorporating hundreds of thousands of predictors and up to millions of subjects. Their work accounts for complex interactions between a highly dimensional feature space through statistical and artificial intelligence (AI)/machine learning algorithms designed to process this complexity.

Additionally, members of the laboratory have incorporated dense, temporal data in intensive care environments and sparse, sporadically collected outpatient data on diverse and heterogeneous study populations. The nature of this research is based on highly imbalanced data with rare outcomes and events. In conjunction with these data sources and growing research partnerships, the laboratory aims to identify features that track with behavioral health traits (e.g., activity, sleep, imaging, etc.) and build novel phenotypes (e.g., predicted suicide risk, predicted carrier of genetic variant, etc.). EHRs offer a unique chance to evaluate a multitude of health outcomes including complex human disease, response to medication, clinical characteristics, and environmental influences impacting patient health for association with genetic factors.

While there is an overwhelming amount of information available in EHRs, typically this data is unstructured and common difficulties arise associated with data availability, missingness, and inconsistency. Therefore, another meaningful component of this laboratory's mission is to extract practical information from the EHRs in a systematic and unbiased fashion. Dr. Denny and others have developed tools which facilitate data extraction, such as KnowledgeMap for natural language processing of clinical text and “phecodes” for phenotypic restructuring and harmonization from EHR billing codes. Moreover, Dr. Denny and others have leveraged data found in EHRs to facilitate the recognition of rare-variant associations. The aggregated risk scores, known as phenotype risk scores (PheRS), leverage structured EHR data by mapping known clinical characteristics of a given Mendelian disease (typically extracted as human phenotype ontology [HPO] terms associated with characteristics from Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM)). These HPO terms are then mapped to phecodes (which are available for each person contained in an EHR) and aggregated into a risk score for each individual. PheRS has demonstrated effective identification of potentially pathogenic variants and has replicated previously unrecognized associations.

In summary, the Precision Health Informatics Lab proposes efficient and cost-effective approaches to identify novel disease/trait-variant relationships with pleiotropic impacts by evaluating large-scale EHR data from multiple sources. Their work has the potential to fundamentally augment the knowledgebase of human health through illumination of the genomic architecture of complex human diseases and traits, insight into common biological mechanisms underlying disease development and progression and trait distributions, and identification of clinically relevant therapeutic targets.

Biography

Dr. Denny's research interests include use of electronic health records (EHRs) and genomics data from large-scale biobanks such as Vanderbilt's BioVU, eMERGE, the All of Us Research Program, and UK Biobank to better understand disease and drug response. Prior to joining the NIH in 2020, Josh was a Professor of Biomedical Informatics and Medicine, founding Director of the Center for Precision Medicine, and Vice President for Personalized Medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, where he was both a practicing internist and research scientist. Josh's lab and center focused on the secondary use of EHR data for discovery, including the development of phenome‐wide association studies (PheWAS), phenotype risk scores (PheRS), work he is continuing here at NHGRI. He has also led efforts implementing precision medicine to improve patient outcomes by helping launch the prospective PREDICT pharmacogenomics program at Vanderbilt and within the NHGRI IGNITE Network.

Dr. Denny was the recipient of the Homer Warner award from the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) in 2008 and 2009 and AMIA New Investigator Award in 2012. He is an elected member of the National Academy of Medicine, the American College of Medical Informatics, and the American Society for Clinical Investigation. He currently serves as the Chief Executive Officer of the National Institutes of Health's All of Us Research Program.

Selected Publications

  1. Zeng C, Bastarache LA, Tao R, Venner E, Hebbring S, Andujar JD, Bland ST, Crosslin DR, Pratap S, Cooley A, Pacheco JA, Christensen KD, Perez E, Zawatsky CLB, Witkowski L, Zouk H, Weng C, Leppig KA, Sleiman PMA, Hakonarson H, Williams MS, Luo Y, Jarvik GP, Green RC, Chung WK, Gharavi AG, Lennon NJ, Rehm HL, Gibbs RA, Peterson JF, Roden DM, Wiesner GL, Denny JC. Association of Pathogenic Variants in Hereditary Cancer Genes With Multiple Diseases. JAMA Oncol. 2022;8(6):835-844.
  2. Denny JC, Collins FS. Precision medicine in 2030-seven ways to transform healthcare. Cell. 2021;184(6):1415-1419.
  3. Bastarache L, Denny JC, Roden DM. Phenome-Wide Association Studies. JAMA. 2022;327(1):75-76.
  4. Keaton JM, Kamali Z, Xie T, Vaez A, Williams A, Goleva SB, Ani A, Evangelou E, Hellwege JN, Yengo L, Young WJ, Traylor M, Giri A, Zheng Z, Zeng J, Chasman DI, Morris AP, Caulfield MJ, Hwang SJ, Kooner JS, Conen D, Attia JR, Morrison AC, Loos RJF, Kristiansson K, Schmidt R, Hicks AA, Pramstaller PP, Nelson CP, Samani NJ, Risch L, Gyllensten U, Melander O, Riese H, Wilson JF, Campbell H, Rich SS, Psaty BM, Lu Y, Rotter JI, Guo X, Rice KM, Vollenweider P, Sundström J, Langenberg C, Tobin MD, Giedraitis V, Luan J, Tuomilehto J, Kutalik Z, Ripatti S, Salomaa V, Girotto G, Trompet S, Jukema JW, van der Harst P, Ridker PM, Giulianini F, Vitart V, Goel A, Watkins H, Harris SE, Deary IJ, van der Most PJ, Oldehinkel AJ, Keavney BD, Hayward C, Campbell A, Boehnke M, Scott LJ, Boutin T, Mamasoula C, Järvelin MR, Peters A, Gieger C, Lakatta EG, Cucca F, Hui J, Knekt P, Enroth S, De Borst MH, Polašek O, Concas MP, Catamo E, Cocca M, Li-Gao R, Hofer E, Schmidt H, Spedicati B, Waldenberger M, Strachan DP, Laan M, Teumer A, Dörr M, Gudnason V, Cook JP, Ruggiero D, Kolcic I, Boerwinkle E, Traglia M, Lehtimäki T, Raitakari OT, Johnson AD, Newton-Cheh C, Brown MJ, Dominiczak AF, Sever PJ, Poulter N, Chambers JC, Elosua R, Siscovick D, Esko T, Metspalu A, Strawbridge RJ, Laakso M, Hamsten A, Hottenga JJ, de Geus E, Morris AD, Palmer CNA, Nolte IM, Milaneschi Y, Marten J, Wright A, Zeggini E, Howson JMM, O'Donnell CJ, Spector T, Nalls MA, Simonsick EM, Liu Y, van Duijn CM, Butterworth AS, Danesh JN, Menni C, Wareham NJ, Khaw KT, Sun YV, Wilson PWF, Cho K, Visscher PM, Denny JC, Million Veteran Program, Lifelines Cohort Study, CHARGE consortium, ICBP Consortium, Levy D, Edwards TL, Munroe PB, Snieder H, Warren HR. Genome-wide analysis in over 1 million individuals of European ancestry yields improved polygenic risk scores for blood pressure traits. Nat Genet. 2024;56(5):778-791.

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This page was last updated on Thursday, August 29, 2024