Machine Learning and Comorbidity-Based Investigations into the Genetics of Stuttering
Shaw, Douglas
0000-0001-8789-0226
:
2024-03-04
Abstract
Developmental stuttering is a speech disorder characterized by disruption in the forward movement of speech. This disruption includes part-word and single-syllable repetitions, prolongations, and involuntary tension that blocks syllables and words, and the disorder has a life-time prevalence of 6-12%. Within Vanderbilt's electronic health record (EHR)-linked biorepository (BioVU), only 142 individuals out of 92,762 participants (0.15%) are identified with diagnostic ICD9/10 codes, suggesting a large portion of people who stutter do not have a record of diagnosis within the EHR. To identify individuals affected by stuttering within our EHR, we built a PheCode-driven and genetic risk models to impute the stuttering phenotype in Vanderbilt’s biobank and model phenotypic and genotypic risk in BioVU for the purpose of genetic discovery.