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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsDubai's Bold Step in Genomic Screening: MBRU-Led Study Graces Nature Medicine Cover
Dubai Health and Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences (MBRU) have etched a significant milestone in global medical research with a groundbreaking study featured on the cover of Nature Medicine, one of the world's most prestigious peer-reviewed journals. Published on April 21, 2026, the paper titled "Citywide premarital genomic screening in a Middle Eastern population" highlights the feasibility and impact of Dubai's mandatory premarital genomic screening program for Emirati nationals. This achievement underscores UAE's commitment to precision medicine, blending cutting-edge science with public health strategy in a region with high consanguinity rates.
The study, led by first author Khulood Alblooshi, an Emirati second-year MSc Biomedical Sciences student at MBRU, details screening of 1,000 couples (2,000 individuals) across 18 primary healthcare centers (PHCs) in Dubai. Using targeted sequencing of 782 genes linked to severe autosomal recessive disorders, researchers identified 79 at-risk couples (8%, 95% CI: 6.4–9.7%), a rate notably higher than the 3.9% in Australia's Mackenzie’s Mission. Hemoglobinopathies dominated (41%), but 59% involved diverse genes, including population-specific variants from Dubai's genomic database.
MBRU and Dubai Health: Forging an Integrated Academic Health Powerhouse
MBRU, established in 2016 as Dubai's pioneering graduate-level medical university, forms the academic backbone of this collaboration with Dubai Health. Together, they operate within an integrated academic health system that seamlessly links clinical care, education, and discovery. Since inception, their researchers have authored 2,362 papers in top journals, with several scientists ranking in Stanford's top 2% most-cited globally for four years running.
Dr. Amer Sharif, CEO of Dubai Health and President of MBRU, emphasized, "We are proud of the progress achieved, made possible by the vision of our leadership... We remain committed to empowering our talent to produce impactful research." This synergy is supported by 10 specialized research centers, fostering multidisciplinary work from genomics to clinical translation.
The cover art, crafted by Dubai Health's Maryam AlHathboor and Fatima Baobaid, fuses Dubai's iconic skyline with DNA strands inspired by Emirati khoos weaving—a poignant nod to cultural heritage meeting modern innovation.
Unpacking the Study: Methods and Groundbreaking Findings
The program, launched January 2025, mandates screening for Emiratis via PHCs or the DubaiNow app. Blood samples undergo whole-exome or whole-genome sequencing at Dubai Health's Genomic Medicine Center, focusing on a curated 782-gene panel: 558 UAE-mandated severe disease genes plus 224 locally prioritized variants. Coverage exceeded 99% at ≥10× depth, with a 1.9% analytical failure rate and 11.9–14.6-day turnaround.
- At-risk identification: 79 couples shared pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants; 63.8% identical variants, linked to 28% genomic consanguinity (vs. self-reported 39.9%).
- Undiagnosed cases: 4 homozygous carriers (2.5% of carriers), revealing conditions like VPS13A disease and congenital adrenal hyperplasia.
- Interventions: 80% proceeded to marriage with free IVF/preimplantation genetic testing (PGT-M) via Al Amal Initiative; 20% opted out.
Surveys revealed 88.7% couple satisfaction, though 67.9% reported anxiety. Providers praised feasibility (100% positive), noting education gaps. Read the full open-access paper here for detailed workflows and figures.
Precision Medicine in Action: Reducing Rare Disease Burden in UAE
In consanguineous populations like UAE's Emiratis, autosomal recessive disorders pose significant risks. Dubai's program addresses this proactively, potentially slashing incidence via early detection and interventions. Compared to voluntary programs, mandatory screening boosts uptake, with hemoglobinopathies (α/β-thalassemia, sickle cell) comprising 41% risks—addressable via simple tests plus sequencing.
Local adaptations proved crucial: 18% risks from Dubai-specific genes would evade standard panels. Long-term, this feeds national registries for variant reclassification and policy refinement, aligning with UAE's Emirati Genome Program and 100,000 Genomes Project.
| Metric | Dubai Program | Australia (Mackenzie’s) |
|---|---|---|
| At-risk Couples (%) | 8% | 3.9% |
| Couples Screened | 1,000 | Large cohort |
| Key Diseases | Hemoglobinopathies (41%) | Various recessive |
This data-driven approach exemplifies cost-effective prevention, with IVF/PGT-M subsidies ensuring equity.
Spotlight on Emerging Talent: Khulood Alblooshi's Journey at MBRU
As first author, MSc student Khulood Alblooshi embodies MBRU's graduate training excellence. Her leadership in this high-impact study—from design to analysis—highlights how MBRU's Biomedical Sciences program equips Emiratis for global research. MBRU's scholarships and mentorship foster such breakthroughs, producing top-cited scientists.
Alblooshi's work aligns with UAE's Emiratization in STEM, inspiring peers amid MBRU's rise in regional rankings.
Building on Momentum: UAE's Genomic Revolution and MBRU's Contributions
This publication builds on prior feats like the first Arab Pangenome Reference (Nature Communications, 2025), addressing European-biased references. MBRU's Center for Genomic Discovery drives such initiatives, partnering with global entities like University of Birmingham Dubai.
UAE's ecosystem—via Ministry of Health, Emirati Genome Council—positions Dubai as a precision medicine hub, with whole-genome sequencing for newborns and premarital pairs.Explore Dubai Health's discovery pillar for more.
Challenges, Perceptions, and Path Forward
Despite successes, hurdles persist: reference biases, short-read limits for homologous genes, and emotional impacts like anxiety. Future steps include long-read sequencing, AI integration, and expanded panels. Longitudinal tracking will quantify disease reduction, optimizing costs (e.g., targeted 4-variant + thalassemia screen detects 54%).
Stakeholder views: 88.7% couples value screening; providers note scalability but urge better education. Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed: "Significant milestone in Dubai's research landscape."
MBRU's Role in Elevating UAE Higher Education and Research
MBRU exemplifies UAE's higher ed push: graduate-focused, research-intensive, integrated with clinical practice. Programs like MSc Biomedical Sciences train next-gen leaders, contributing to 2,362 papers and Stanford citations. Amid UAE's Vision 2031, MBRU bridges academia-healthcare, fostering Emirati talent in genomics—a field vital for population health.
This positions UAE universities as global players, attracting collaborations and talent.
Global Ripples: Lessons for Precision Public Health
Dubai's model offers blueprint for high-consanguinity regions: mandatory, accessible screening with interventions reduces recessive diseases, generates local data, and cuts costs. As consanguinity affects 10-50% in Middle East/Asia, scalable frameworks like this advance equity in genomics.
Sheikh Mansoor: "Scientific research... central role in driving medical innovation." UAE's feats inspire worldwide.
Looking Ahead: Sustaining Momentum in UAE Research
With 10 research centers, Dubai Health-MBRU eyes dynamic panels, AI diagnostics, and registries. MBRU's training ensures sustained output, aligning with UAE's health leadership. This cover feature cements Dubai as innovation nexus, blending heritage with science for healthier futures.
For aspiring researchers, explore opportunities at UAE universities via AcademicJobs UAE listings.

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