The Kibbutzim Family Study (KFS) was established in 1992 to investigate the environmental and genetic determinants of cardiometabolic risk factors and their change over time. The participants belong to large families living in close-knit communities, called “Kibbutzim”, in Northern Israel. The Kibbutz has been a communal settlement, which has created a relatively homogeneous environment for its members. Kibbutz members are mostly of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry, with the remaining members belonging to other Jewish subgroups. Participants were recruited in two phases from six Kibbutzim. In the first recruitment phase of the study (1992–1993) 500 individuals from 80 extended families (range 2 to 43) were examined. During the second phase (1999–2000), all participants from the first phase were invited for repeat examinations (80% response rate) and additional new participants were recruited, giving a total of 922 individuals from 150 extended families (range 2 to 55). Families were invited to participate if they consisted of at least four individuals who (i) lived in the Kibbutz, (ii) spanned at least two generations, and (iii) were at least 15 years old. Families were retained if at least two family members consented to participate in the study. Overall, 1033 participants were recruited; 111 were examined only in the first phase, 533 only in the second phase, and 389 were included in both. 901 individuals were successfully genotyped using Illumina HumanCoreExome BeadChip.
The DECAF trial was conducted at the Texas Cardiac Arrhythmia Institute (TCAI) in 2013 in collaboration with the University of Texas at Austin. Four hundred consecutive AF patients undergoing catheter ablation were enrolled. All participants provided voluntary informed consents. Blood samples were collected before the ablation procedure and labeled with anonymous patient identifier. The researchers at UT Austin responsible for DNA extraction and genetic analysis were blinded about the clinical characteristics and identification of the study participants. AF cases included adults >18 years of age from both sex and all AF types.
The Effects of Air Pollution on the Development of Obesity in Children (Meta-AIR) study was proposed to study a subset of the Children's Health Study (CHS) participants representing the extremes of long-term traffic-related air pollution exposure occurring in Southern California CHS communities. The primary aim of the Meta-AIR study was to investigate whether lifetime exposure to air pollution increases risk for obesity and metabolic dysfunction at 17-18 years of age. A total of 56 Hispanic White participants (16 asthma cases and 40 controls) were included in the TOPMed project.
Data Access Committee appointed by Haukeland University Hospital for omics datasets for Parkinson's disease and related disorders, generated in studies under the ParkOme project. Omics datasets of different types are generated from fresh frozen brain tissue from individuals with neurodegenerative parkinsonisms and neurologically healthy controls.
14 TNBC tumors with tumor percentage ~90% were selected for in silico spike-in experiment