Summary:

The Million Veteran Program, a genetic database of over a million retired military service members, is in jeopardy due to the lack of agreements between the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Energy Department for the use of supercomputers for research purposes. The program has contributed to research on the genetics of anxiety and peripheral artery disease, but researchers fear that the lack of agreements and the hiring freeze have caused significant damage to the program and the VA's research enterprise. The uncertainty has led to job losses and the cancellation of research contracts, which could jeopardize the survival of the program.

One of the worldโ€™s biggest genetic databases comprises DNA data donated over the years by more than a million retired military service members. Itโ€™s part of a project run by the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The initiative, dubbed the Million Veteran Program, is a โ€œcrown jewel of the country,โ€ said David Shulkin, a physician who served as VA secretary during the first Trump administration. Data from the project has contributed to research on the genetics of anxiety and peripheral artery disease, for instance, and has resulted in hundreds of published papers. Researchers say the repository has the potential to help answer health questions not only specific to veterans โ€” like who is most vulnerable to post-service mental health issues, or why they seem more prone to cancer โ€” but also relevant to the nation as a whole.

โ€œWhen the VA does research, it helps veterans, but it helps all Americans,โ€ Shulkin said in an interview.  

Researchers now say they fear the program is in limbo, jeopardizing the years of work it took to gather the veteransโ€™ genetic data and other information, like surveys and blood samples.

โ€œThereโ€™s sort of this cone of silence,โ€ said Amy Justice, a Yale epidemiologist with a VA appointment as a staff physician. โ€œWeโ€™ve got to make sure this survives.โ€

Genetic data is enormously complex, and analyzing it requires vast computing power that VA doesnโ€™t possess. Instead, it has relied on a partnership with the Energy Department, which provides its supercomputers for research purposes.

In late April, VA Secretary Doug Collins disclosed to Sen. Richard Blumenthal, the top Democrat on the Senate Veteransโ€™ Affairs Committee, that agreements authorizing use of the computers for the genomics project remained unsigned, with some expiring in September, according to materials shared with KFF Health News by congressional Democrats.

Spokespeople for the two agencies did not reply to multiple requests for comment. Other current and former employees within the agencies โ€” who asked not to be identified, for fear of reprisal from the Trump administration โ€” said they donโ€™t know whether the critical agreements will be renewed.

One researcher called computing โ€œa key ingredientโ€ to major advances in health research, such as the discovery of new drugs.

The agreement with the Energy Department โ€œshould be extended for the next 10 years,โ€ the researcher said.

The uncertainty has caused โ€œincrementalโ€ damage, Justice said, pointing to some Million Veteran Program grants that have lapsed. As the year progresses, she predicted, โ€œpeople are going to be feeling it a lot.โ€

Because of their military experience, maintaining veteransโ€™ health poses different challenges compared with caring for civilians. The programโ€™s examinations of genetic and clinical data allow researchers to investigate questions that have bedeviled veterans for years. As examples, Shulkin cited โ€œhow we might be able to better diagnose earlier and start thinking about effective treatments for these toxic exposuresโ€ โ€” such as to burn pits used to dispose of trash at military outposts overseas โ€” as well as predispositions to post-traumatic stress disorder.

โ€œThe rest of the research community isnโ€™t likely to focus specificallyโ€ on veterans, he said. The VA community, however, has delivered discoveries of importance to the world: Three VA researchers have won Nobel Prizes, and the agency created the first pacemaker. Its efforts also helped ignite the boom in GLP-1 weight loss drugs.

Yet turbulence has been felt throughout VAโ€™s research enterprise. Like other government scientific agencies, itโ€™s been buffeted by layoffs, contract cuts, and canceled research.

โ€œThere are planned trials that have not started, there are ongoing trials that have been stopped, and there are trials that have fallen apart due to staff layoffs โ€” yes or no?โ€ said Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), pressing Collins in a May hearing of the Senate Veteransโ€™ Affairs Committee.

The agency, which has a budget of roughly $1 billion for its research arm this fiscal year, has slashed infrastructure that supports scientific inquiry, according to documents shared with KFF Health News by Senate Democrats on the Veteransโ€™ Affairs Committee. It has canceled at least 37 research-related contracts, including for genomic sequencing and for library and biostatistics services. The department has separately canceled four contracts for cancer registries for veterans, creating potential gaps in the nationโ€™s statistics.

Job worries also consume many scientists at the VA.

According to agency estimates in May, about 4,000 of its workers are on term limits, with contracts that expire after certain periods. Many of these individuals worked not only for the VAโ€™s research groups but also with clinical teams or local medical centers.

When the new leaders first entered the agency, they instituted a hiring freeze, current and former VA researchers told KFF Health News. That prevented the agencyโ€™s research offices from renewing contracts for their scientists and support staff, which in previous years had frequently been a pro forma step. Some of those individuals who had been around for decades havenโ€™t been rehired, one former researcher told KFF Health News.

The freeze and the uncertainty around it led to people simply departing the agency, a current VA researcher said.

The losses, the individual said, include some people who โ€œhad years of experience and expertise that canโ€™t be replaced.โ€

Preserving jobs โ€” or some jobs โ€” has been a congressional focus. In May, after inquiries from Sen. Jerry Moran, the Republican who chairs the Veteransโ€™ Affairs Committee, about staffing for agency research and the Million Veteran Program, Collins wrote in a letter that he was extending the terms of research employees for 90 days and developing exemptions to the hiring freeze for the genomics project and other research initiatives.

Holding jobs is one thing โ€” doing them is another. In June, at the annual research meeting of AcademyHealth โ€” an organization of researchers, policymakers, and others who study how U.S. health care is delivered โ€” some VA researchers were unable to deliver a presentation touching on psychedelics and mental health disparities and another on discrimination against LGBTQ+ patients, Aaron Carroll, the organizationโ€™s president, told KFF Health News.

At that conference, reflecting a trend across the federal government, researchers from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality also dropped out of presenting. โ€œThis drop in federal participation is deeply concerning, not only for our community of researchers and practitioners but for the public, who rely on transparency, collaboration, and evidence-based policy grounded in rigorous science,โ€ Carroll said.

Weโ€™d like to speak with current and former personnel from the Department of Health and Human Services or its component agencies who believe the public should understand the impact of whatโ€™s happening within the federal health bureaucracy. Please message KFF Health News on Signal at (415) 519-8778 or get in touch here.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFโ€”an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

This post was originally published on this site