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Archive for the ‘Personalized Medicine’ Category

Predictive Oncology Launches New AI Platform for Vaccine and Drug Development Targeting Coronaviruses and Acute Respiratory Syndromes (COVID-19, MERS,…

Saturday, March 14th, 2020

With More Viral Outbreaks Expected, Predictive Oncology Expands AI Platforms to Aid in Vaccine and Drug Development

MINNEAPOLIS, March 12, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Predictive Oncology Inc. (POAI) (POAI or the Company), a knowledge-driven company focused on applying artificial intelligence (AI) to personalized medicine and drug discovery, today announces it will launch a new AI platform for vaccine and drug development targeting Coronaviruses and Acute Respiratory Syndromes (COVID-19, MERS, and SARS) through an operating agreement with Soluble Therapeutics. POAI has also signed a letter of intent with InventaBioTech to acquire Soluble Therapeutics, its assets and its HSCTM Technology.

Global health experts are predicting an ever-increasing number of viral outbreaks like COVID-19, POAI is taking proactive measures to be part of the solution by applying artificial intelligence to aid in the development of new drugs and vaccines. Utilizing Soluble Therapeutics HSCTM technology and its six machines, Soluble's computer system expects to be able to run over 12,000 computer simulations per machine to help generate new diagnostics, vaccines and therapeutics. Solubles HSCTM technology has demonstrated efficacy with both new and existing vaccine and drug programs, ensuring the best delivery mechanisms to address new pandemics and battle cancers.

The market for biologicals that includes vaccines, proteins and antibodies used in disease treatment is projected to reach $479.7 billion by 2024 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.9%.* The capital the US Congress has allocated to fight COVID-19 is $8.0 billion dollars.

Protein formulation is often a bottleneck in protein-based drug development, and Soluble Therapeutics technology directly addresses this bottleneck.Combining the HSCTM technology with POAIs predictive modeling platform is expected to create a new rapid AI discovery platform that quickly and cost-effectively identifies potential therapeutic candidates. The HSCTM technology accelerates the formulation process and is believed to achieve in a month what can take a team of scientists several months to a year to achieve. The HSCTM technology only requires milligrams where a traditional formulation effort can require up to a gram of material.

HSC Technology is a self-contained, automated, chromatographic system that conducts high throughput, microcapillary, self-interaction chromatography screens, using additives and excipients commonly included in protein formulations. The data generated from these screens is analyzed by a predictive algorithm used to identify the optimal combination(s) of additives and excipients, resulting in increased solubility and physical stability of proteins. The system works in concert with a predictive algorithm of formulation parameters that can be exclusively accessed through Soluble Therapeutics.

The HSC Instrument, and underlying technology, has been validated over the past ten years via industry and academic collaborations. For biopharmaceutical clients and vaccine manufacturers, this means faster development times and quicker progression of molecules into the clinic. The COVID-19 vaccine development efforts by industry and government can benefit enormously using the Soluble HSCTM technology with POAIs predictive modeling platform.

Soluble hassix customized machines in its facilities that can help identify the best solutions for vaccines, proteins or antibodies being developed to help fight the COVID-19 contagion. Through this operating partnership and acquisition, we are ready to assist in the development of viable treatment options that use biological, complex ingredients and formulations to speed up the pre-clinical and clinical development of treatments, said Carl Schwartz, CEO of Predictive Oncology.

The combination of Soluble Therapeutics technology with Predictive Oncologys AI capability has the potential to rapidly optimize formulations thereby accelerating the early phase of protein therapeutic development, said Dr. Larry DeLucas, co-inventor of the HSC technology.

Under the operating agreement, the Company and existing Soluble managers will operate the Soluble Therapeutics business pending the acquisition. The Company's acquisition of Soluble Therapeutics is subject to the completion of a definitive agreement and customary closing conditions and is expected to close in the second quarter of 2020.

Story continues

*Global Biologics Market to touch US$479 Billion Dollars by 2024. Transparency Market Research. Feb 2018. Web.

About Predictive Oncology Inc.

Predictive Oncology (POAI) operates through three segments (Domestic, International and other), which contain four subsidiaries; Helomics, TumorGenesis, Skyline Medical and Skyline Europe. Helomics applies artificial intelligence to its rich data gathered from patient tumors to both personalize cancer therapies for patients and drive the development of new targeted therapies in collaborations with pharmaceutical companies. Helomics CLIA-certified lab provides clinical testing that assists oncologists in individualizing patient treatment decisions, by providing an evidence-based roadmap for therapy. In addition to its proprietary precision oncology platform, Helomics offers boutique CRO services that leverage its TruTumor, patient-derived tumor models coupled to a wide range of multi-omics assays (genomics, proteomics and biochemical), and an AI-powered proprietary bioinformatics platform to provide a tailored solution to its clients specific needs. Predictive Oncologys TumorGenesis subsidiary is developing a new rapid approach to growing tumors in the laboratory, which essentially fools cancer cells into thinking they are still growing inside a patient. Its proprietary Oncology Discovery Technology Platform kits will assist researchers and clinicians to identify which cancer cells bind to specific biomarkers. Once the biomarkers are identified they can be used in TumorGenesis Oncology Capture Technology Platforms which isolate and help categorize an individual patients heterogeneous tumor samples to enable the development of patient specific treatment options. Helomics and TumorGenesis are focused on ovarian cancer. Predictive Oncologys Skyline Medical division markets its patented and FDA cleared STREAMWAY System, which automates the collection, measurement and disposal of waste fluid, including blood, irrigation fluid and others, within a medical facility, through both domestic and international divisions. The company has achieved sales in five of the seven continents through both direct sales and distributor partners. For more information, please visit http://www.predictive-oncology.com.

Forward-looking Statements

Certain of the matters discussed in the press release contain forward-looking statements that involve material risks to and uncertainties in the Companys business that may cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated by the statements made herein. Such risks and uncertainties include (i) the risk that the acquisition ofSoluble Therapeuticswill not be completed, or, if completed, that the Soluble Therapeutics technology does not provide anticipated benefits to the Company or involves higher costs than anticipated or other negative consequences, (ii) risks related to the recent merger with Helomics, including the fact that the combined company will not be able to continue operating without additional financing; possible failure to realize anticipated benefits of the merger; costs associated with the merger may be higher than expected; the merger may result in disruption of the Companys and Helomics existing businesses, distraction of management and diversion of resources; and the market price of the Companys common stock may decline as a result of the merger; (iii) risks related to our partnerships with other companies, including the need to negotiate the definitive agreements; possible failure to realize anticipated benefits of these partnerships; and costs of providing funding to our partner companies, which may never be repaid or provide anticipated returns; and (iv) other risks and uncertainties relating to the Company that include, among other things, current negative operating cash flows and a need for additional funding to finance our operating plan; the terms of any further financing, which may be highly dilutive and may include onerous terms; unexpected costs and operating deficits, and lower than expected sales and revenues; sales cycles that can be longer than expected, resulting in delays in projected sales or failure to make such sales; uncertain willingness and ability of customers to adopt new technologies and other factors that may affect further market acceptance, if our product is not accepted by our potential customers, it is unlikely that we will ever become profitable; adverse economic conditions; adverse results of any legal proceedings; the volatility of our operating results and financial condition; inability to attract or retain qualified senior management personnel, including sales and marketing personnel; our ability to establish and maintain the proprietary nature of our technology through the patent process, as well as our ability to possibly license from others patents and patent applications necessary to develop products; Predictives ability to implement its long range business plan for various applications of its technology; Predictives ability to enter into agreements with any necessary marketing and/or distribution partners and with any strategic or joint venture partners; the impact of competition, the obtaining and maintenance of any necessary regulatory clearances applicable to applications of Predictives technology; and management of growth and other risks and uncertainties that may be detailed from time to time in the Companys reports filed with the SEC, which are available for review at http://www.sec.gov. This is not a solicitation to buy or sell securities and does not purport to be an analysis of Predictives financial position. See Predictives most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K, and subsequent reports and other filings at http://www.sec.gov.

Contact:Bob Myers651-389-4800bmyers@skylinemedical.com

Source: Predictive Oncology Inc.

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Predictive Oncology Launches New AI Platform for Vaccine and Drug Development Targeting Coronaviruses and Acute Respiratory Syndromes (COVID-19, MERS,...

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3D printing ink may solve the "toothpaste problem" – Futurity: Research News

Saturday, March 14th, 2020

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A new kind of ink for 3D printing liquifies when pressed through the nozzle of a 3D printer, but then quickly returns to its original shape, researchers report.

The invention paves the way for personalized biomaterial implants, according to new research.

In the same way that medicine has seen a trend towards precision medicinewhere doctors tailor treatment to the genetic make-up of the patientin recent years, materials scientists have increasingly turned their attention to precision biomaterials. As things stand, however, personalized implants remain a long way off.

But at the moment, were making great progress toward this goaland learning a lot in the process, says Mark Tibbitt, a professor of macromolecular engineering in the mechanical and process engineering department at ETH Zurich.

Previously, the fact that researchers had to develop new [A1] inks for the 3D printer for each application held back researchers working in the field of precision biomaterials.

If someone wanted to replicate part of an eye, for instance, they werent able to draw on the work of people who design auricular prostheses, Tibbitt explains. But now, he and his team have invented a universal carrier ink that dramatically simplifies the development of new applications, the researchers write.

Essentially, 3D printing calls for a solution to a conundrum casually referred to as the toothpaste problem. On one hand, toothpaste should not be too viscous as that would make it difficult to squeeze through the narrow opening of the tube; on the other, it cant be too fluid because it would then immediately drip off the toothbrush.

Similarly, in 3D printing, the carrier ink needs to be able to liquify to flow through the printing nozzle, and then solidify so that the printed structure does not immediately lose its shape.

This is where the universal carrier ink that Tibbitts team has developed can help. It consists of cellulose fibers dissolved in water combined with biodegradable polymeric nanoparticles. When no external pressure is exerted, the fibers attach themselves to the particles. This creates a transient network that can be disrupted when subjected to the high shear forces in the printer nozzlebut that quickly reforms after passing through the narrow opening.

In further experiments, Tibbitt and his team added different polymers (such as hyaluronic acid, gelatine, collagen, or fibrinogen) to their new carrier ink. These secondary polymers did not change the inks flow behavior through the head of the printer nozzle, but enabled the researchers to solidify the transient network to form the printed structure in a second, subsequent step.

Tibbitts team also tested how living cells behave in the carrier inkand found that the same number of cells survive in the ink as they do outside. Based on the fact that researchers can introduce hydrophobic substances into the nanoparticlesand add hydrophilic substances to the aqueous phase with the cellulose fibersthey demonstrated that their ink is also suitable for the development of novel drug delivery systems.

The research appears in the journal Small.

Source: ETH Zurich

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3D printing ink may solve the "toothpaste problem" - Futurity: Research News

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Running Your Pharma Company Out Of A Starbucks: Drug Discovery Moves To The Cloud – Forbes

Saturday, March 14th, 2020

Fifteen years and $2.5 billion dollars is too much to get a drug to market that many cannot even ... [+] afford. Solution: put big pharma in the cloud, and make drug discovery possible from a coffee shop.

Small biotech start-ups accounted for 63% of all new prescription drug approvals in the last five years. And the way that many big drug companies are establishing their own venture capital funds to invest in small, innovative start-ups, its easy to argue that big pharma isnt doing much innovation these days.

Whats going on here?

You can literally sit at a Starbucks, design a compound, have the robots assemble that compound and go through the purification and analysis steps to validate what youve made, Mark Fischer-Colbrie tells me. Hes the President and CEO of Strateos, and his company is taking all the processes, instruments, and robotics youd find in a big pharmaceutical R&D facility and making them accessible to anybody with a laptop and a good idea.

This is the lab of the future, where automated drug discovery can be done from the comfort of a coffee shop. The capital investments associated with traditional pharmaceutical research and development are gone. And perhaps most importantly for Fischer-Colbrie, this is the foundation biology needs to become industrialized.

Combining automation in biology and chemical synthesis while leveraging big data and machine learning, Strateos Robotic Cloud Lab is a platform for biological discovery at unprecedented speed, reproducibility, and cost-effectiveness.

Combining forces with Eli Lilly and Company, Strateos powers a robotic cloud laboratory that can compress a three-and-a-half year drug discovery cycle into 12 months. Open to a wide range of usersfrom big pharma through to synthetic biology and academiathe company has triggered a high-throughput revolution in life science.

If you look broadly across life sciences, I would estimate more than 90% of the workflows are manual, with uncertain data capture, say Fischer-Colbrie, reflecting on the status quo of most lab research today. In order to advance discovery, all of this needs to get industrialized, which means automation, it means repeatability.

A reproducible platform for better drug discovery

Therein lies a huge benefit for companies and consumers: the drastically improved reproducibility of Strateos automated workflows. Science is in the grips of a replication crisis. A Nature report not too long ago showed that 70% of academics had tried and failed to reproduce anothers experiment. One study of cancer research showed that the rate of converting preclinical cancer research to successful treatments was as low as 11%. The rate for drugs, in general, has previously been reported at somewhere around 25%.

The result of this? A long, wasteful, and expensive drug discovery process, with small numbers of expensive therapies available to patients.

To be in an environment that takes 15 years and $2.5 billion dollars to get a drug to market that no-one can pay for is a broken model that needs to be rectified, Fischer-Colbrie laments. And though there are various reasons for the lack of translation of science findings, reproducibility of the method is a huge component. Strateos platform provides the robust, automated design-make-test-analyze technology that can turn things around.

Fischer-Colbrie tells me that after youve designed a drug from the corner coffee shop, You then have the whole biological testing piece looking at dose-response curves, and all the other criteria youd need to make first level assessments of whether that compound might make a good therapy or not.

Fast-track cancer therapies

Strateos is a merger of Transcriptic and 3Scan. The former has a focus on high-throughput biology, and the latter focuses on making tissue biology and histopathology into data science. Combining these competencies within Strateos means the company well-suited to applying its technology platform for cancer.

Instead of spending the painstaking hours to prepare samples manually, you can take samples from a patient, slice them into micron-thin slices and deposit them automatically on a tape. You can then look at your 3D image and run a range of different analysesit might be some transcriptomics on slice 18, or immunohistochemistry on slice 19.

Tissue handling is a huge bottleneck currently, but this is a new way of getting data in a totally different manner, Fischer-Colbrie explains. The 3scan offering has the benefit of being able to generate new datasets that in turn you can then use the San Diego lab to come up with compounds that might work against what youve found in those tissue samples.

Focus on the concept

Strateos has created an entire life sciences discovery foundry, and one which is providing the necessary step to turn laboratories into data generation engines - launching biology as an information science.

Fischer-Colbrie enthusiastically stresses that it really allows scientists to focus on concept. Theyre not thinking about how to maintain equipment, or which company they have to negotiate complicated contracts with. Scientists can focus on their hypotheses and experiments and not the infrastructure or day to day worries in the lab.

Its a game-changer, and one that improves the quality of hypothesis-driven research in general.

You can watch experiments happen online, get the data rapidly, and feed into machine learning models that provide whole new hypotheses overall, notes Fischer-Colbrie, along with another crucial point. These data, importantly, also include metadata such as environmental conditions and the status of the equipment. So, if you get an anomalous result, you can go back and understand what was going on at the time.

A range of industries set to reap the rewards

In the short term, Strateos platform will be open to a range of potential uses across the life sciences, from big pharma through to personalized medicine and even work in large molecules such as antibodies.

In synthetic biology, in particular, Fischer-Colbrie is excited about the platforms ability to rapidly accelerate experiments and to optimize conditions for gene editing. Its stunning in the context of the ability here to turn ideas into data. We believe in some cases this can happen in as little as 48 hours. This will have a significant improvement in the cycle time of experimentation and design.

The world is gradually shifting from standalone instruments to automated work cells, and now we really have to think about data generation and how to analyze that data. He concludes. Were excited about how this will have an impact across the board.

Follow me on twitter at @johncumbers and @synbiobeta. Subscribe to my weekly newsletters in synthetic biology and space settlement.

Thank you to Peter Bickerton for additional research and reporting in this article. Im the founder of SynBioBeta, and some of the companies that I write aboutincluding Strateosare sponsors of the SynBioBeta conference and weekly digest heres the full list of SynBioBeta sponsors.

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Running Your Pharma Company Out Of A Starbucks: Drug Discovery Moves To The Cloud - Forbes

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Israel can and should become an important contributor to the international geroscience research, development, application and education – Institute…

Saturday, March 14th, 2020

Vetek (Seniority) the Movement for Longevity and Quality of Life (Israel)

Summary

Due to the aging of the global population and the derivative increase in major aging-related non-communicable diseases and their economic burden, there is an urgent international need to promote the research, development and application of and education on effective and safe therapeutic geroscience interventions. These interventions are designed to mitigate degenerative aging processes, thus preventing and eliminating the main underlying contributors for major chronic aging-related diseases and thus improving the healthy and productive longevity for the elderly population. Insofar as aging is the main contributing factor of major chronic age-related diseases, the research and development efforts in the fields of geroscience and of major chronic diseases are integrally related. Israel can be an important contributor to these international R&D efforts, for which it can offer its proven record of scientific and technological achievements and innovation, its strong supportive infrastructure for research and development, its highly skilled scientific and technological work force, including leadership in diverse branches of biomedical research on aging and aging-related diseases. Yet a stronger effort will be needed to build on those strengths and realize the countrys potential in the field for the benefit of the Israeli and global population. Israel can help further promote the field, not only locally, but internationally, by creating and sharing policy suggestions for the advancement of the field.

1. Israel has made significant progress in the fields related to geroscience and combat of major aging-related diseases.

Israel can and should be an important contributor to the global geroscience endeavors, building on its scientific, technological and societal achievements in the field of aging and related fields[1]:

Building on the past achievements, there is still a vital need to develop the geroscience and healthy longevity field in Israel, and there exists a large space for the growth of the field.

There are several specific pressing needs and demands for the development of the geroscience and healthy longevity field in Israel. The needs and the corresponding recommendations listed below closely follow the points made by the Vetek and allied associations in their recommendations for Enhancing research, development and education for the promotion of healthy longevity and prevention of aging-related diseases in the Israel National Masterplan on Aging. Yet, here they are given a wider international perspective, insofar as these needs and recommendations are quite common and applicable for virtually any country. Moreover, these needs and recommendations can be advocated and promoted via international frameworks and organizations, both globally and for specific countries on a case-by-case basis.

Today, there are about 980,000 people in Israel over the age 65 (about 11% of the countrys population), and it is expected that the number of the elderly will increase to 1.6 million by 2035. This reality demands the preparedness of the healthcare and welfare systems to provide worthy and sufficient services for the elderly, adequate solutions for the prevention of systemic economic and healthcare collapse, as well as for the equitable social inclusion of the elderly, and as a result the improvement of their quality of life and the countys economic growth. To achieve those goals, the advancement of medical research and development is a necessary condition. The aging-related health decline is the major cause of mortality, morbidity and disability. It is thus the root cause of all healthcare and economic challenges related to the population aging and should be addressed according to the severity of the problem. Therefore, considerable resources must be dedicated to the advancement of research, development and education aimed at the amelioration of degenerative aging processes and debilitating aging-related diseases in order to extend healthy longevity as much as possible for the entire population.

Yet, the investment of human and material resources in the field is still insufficient in Israel. Presently, the State of Israel expends only about 0.5% of its general research budget for the research of aging and aging-related diseases (just about $5M dedicated annual state budget). Except for the budget framework for science, technology and innovation for the older persons within the Ministry of Science and Technology, there are no other defined budget frameworks in Israel for research and development in the field of aging, healthy longevity and prevention of aging-related diseases. There are limited support frameworks that can be adapted to the subject, such as research budgets for specific diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, cancer, etc., which by their nature are aging-related diseases. But in fact, there are no dedicated support frameworks specifically addressing aging-related ill health as a whole (old-age multimorbidity), neither addressing aging as the primary contributing factor for age-related diseases, and there is almost no reference to the special medical needs and characteristics of the aging individuals and the older population. Their characteristics and medical needs are often dramatically different in terms of diagnosis and treatment from the younger population, and the difference may have a decisive impact on the effectiveness of treatment. There is also a lack of centralized R&D support frameworks for the field of aging in Israel, such as the NIH's National Institute on Aging that exists in the US.

Therefore, defined budget frameworks must be established for medical research and development that will specifically address the issue of aging, and promote healthy longevity and prevention of aging-related diseases. Specifically, a defined significant percentage of the research and development budgets of the relevant ministries must be dedicated to the field. These should include the Ministry of Health; the Ministry of Science and Technology; the Planning and Budgeting Committee of the Council for Higher Education; the Israel Innovation Authority; the Israel Science Foundation; the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities including the National Infrastructure Forum for Research and Development; the Ministry for Social Equality; the National Insurance Institute; the bi-national and international research programs in which Israel is a partner, particularly in the divisions concerning the research and treatment of non-communicable chronic diseases.

These frameworks must provide funding for calls for research proposals, grants, scholarships, services and action plans designed to alleviate the degenerative aging process and improve the longevity and quality of life of the older population, on behalf and in cooperation of the relevant ministries and institutions.

There is a now a severe deficit of relevant educational materials of any kind in Israel, in the field of aging generally, and particular areas of geroscience and healthy longevity promotion in particular. Currently, aging research is severely under-represented in all academic and other educational frameworks. Good education may be considered a primary condition for progress. There is a need to address the large deficit of knowledge and training on the subject of biological aging, its biomedical improvement and healthy longevity, in most existing institutions of learning. The need should be obvious. It should be clear that prior to any research, development and application on biological aging, there is a need to educate specialists who will be able to contribute to the various aspects of the field. There is an even prior need to educate the broader public on the importance of such research to prepare the ground for further involvement.

Such education is currently very limited. In practical terms, there are presently rather few dedicated structures in Israel to promote and coordinate knowledge exchange and dissemination on biological aging and healthy longevity promotion. There is an urgent necessity for such educational structures to make the narrative on biology of aging and healthy longevity prevalent in the public and academic discourse. To improve the communication and integration, it appears to be crucially important to commonly include the subjects of biogerontology, geroscience and healthy longevity promotion as central parts of learning curricula, and not only in universities, but in every learning and teaching framework, especially those related to biology, medicine or natural sciences generally. Yet, unfortunately, and strangely enough, the study of the biology of aging and longevity is rarely a part of university curriculum and virtually never a part of high school or community education curriculum. Thus, there is a vast range of opportunities to develop educational and training materials and courses, including materials and courses of professional interest, from undergraduate to postgraduate levels, as well as of general interest, presenting recent advances in aging and longevity science. Educational teaching and training materials on the subject should be developed and disseminated for people at all education levels, both for the academia and the general public, for all age groups, for different sectors and in different languages, in accordance with their specific abilities and characteristics. Teaching programs that increase motivation and stimulate scientific thinking in the field should be developed for children, university students at different study stages (undergraduate and graduate), for interns and specialists, and as a part of adult enrichment studies.

In particular, it is necessary to develop study materials, such as courses, text books, problem solvers, guidelines and professional specialization programs in the biology of aging, especially for physicians and biologists in the fields adjacent to aging research, as well as educational materials for the general public. The materials for the general public should include lectures, reviews of the latest scientific developments in the field and practical recommendations for the promotion of healthy longevity and for the preparation of the younger generation to the challenges that expect them. There must be prepared and disseminated authoritative, evidence-based information about lifestyle regimens (such as nutrition, physical activity and rest) that promote healthy longevity and prevent aging-related ill health. A variety of educational teaching and training means should be developed, including conferences, printed materials, knowledge competitions, interactive web platforms, games and other accessible technological means. Relevant ministries and institutions should be involved in the development of and providing access to these educational programs, from the Ministry of Education and the Council for Higher Education to local authorities, public associations, and community centers. In order to facilitate the progress, there is a need to encourage the establishment of educational pilots and the examination of good practices in relevant ministries and other institutional frameworks.

One of the primary specific needs to develop the geroscience field, in Israel and elsewhere, appears to be the establishment of agreeable, scientific evidence-based evaluation criteria for the efficacy and safety of geroprotective (geroscience or healthspan-enhancing) therapies. Such commonly agreed evaluation criteria are presently lacking, in Israel and elsewhere. Yet, they appear to be absolutely necessary in order to set up the end points for the development of geroscience-based therapies and diagnostics and provide value-based incentives for academic, public and commercial R&D entities involved in the field. The field of geroscience is predicated on the recognition of aging as a major contributing and modifiable factor of pathogenesis, including such recognition in regulatory and budgeting frameworks. Yet, it appears that the primary necessary requirement for the degenerative aging process to be recognized as such a modifiable factor and therefore an indication for research, development and intervention, is to develop evidence-based diagnostic evaluation criteria and definitions for degenerative aging and for the efficacy and safety of potential means against it[17]. Without such scientifically grounded and clinically applicable diagnostic evaluation criteria and definitions, the discussions about treating, postponing, intervening into or even curing degenerative aging processes will be mere slogans. It appears to be impossible to treat, postpone, intervene into or cure a condition that it is impossible to diagnostically evaluate and measure the effectiveness and safety of treatment. Such evaluation criteria and measurements would need to become the basis for public geroscience-oriented health programs designed for the prevention of aging-related diseases, while measuring the effectiveness and safety of the interventions.

Therefore, it is necessary to develop and implement improved evaluation measures and criteria for assessing the aging process, for the early diagnosis and prediction of multiple aging-related diseases (old-age multimorbidity), for examining the effectiveness of treatments for their prevention and for estimating and improving the older persons functional and employment abilities. Commonly agreed, science-based and authoritative guidelines should be provided for such measures by authoritative and representative national and international organizations. To develop such measures, it is necessary to increase and improve the collection and processing of various types of data on aging, including biological and medical data in combination with behavioral and social, economic and environmental data. In this process, it is necessary to establish and/or expand relevant databases (registries) and analytical platforms and tools (knowledge centers) in order to facilitate the collection, design, accessibility, analysis, integration and sharing of data on aging, promotion of healthy longevity and prevention of aging-related diseases. These databases and analytical tools should be used predictively to model large amounts of data for more effective diagnosis and treatment and to allow personalized medicine for the older subjects, with reference to their aging process.

In Israel, in order to establish and expand these measurement and analysis systems, it is necessary to involve the relevant ministries and institutions, in particular the Ministry of Health, with the maximum possible cooperation of other entities who have access to data on aging, such as research institutions, hospitals, health maintenance organizations, local authorities and public and commercial research communities. The goals of evaluating the aging processes, early detection and prevention of aging-related ill health as a whole (preventing old-age multimorbidity) and extension of healthy lifespan, should be specifically defined in relevant frameworks and programs, such as the National Program for Personalized Medicine and the National Program for Digital Health, as well as relevant international health promotion programs where Israel takes part. Initiatives and pilots of different extents on the subject should be encouraged in all sectors, while supporting their cooperation.

The above needs and demands for the development of the geroscience and healthy longevity field, directly yield policy recommendations for the fields advancement. Currently, official policy recommendations for the promotion of the geroscience and healthy longevity field are lacking in most major international as well as national frameworks. Such recommendations, for both international and national policy frameworks, must be developed and advocated by authoritative and representative international organizations promoting geroscience research and education.

An exemplary effort to develop and advocate such policy recommendations is the position paper of the International Society on Aging and Disease (ISOAD), entitled The Critical Need to Promote Research of Aging and Aging-related Diseases to Improve Health and Longevity of the Elderly Population (2015)[18]. This position paper makes the general appeal that Governments should ensure the creation and implementation of the policies to promote research into the biology of aging and aging-related diseases, for improving the health of the global elderly population. It further provides specific policy suggestions with reference to enhancing funding, institutional support and incentives for biomedical aging research. This position paper has been translated to 12 languages and submitted for consideration to several governments. It has stimulated further discussion, encouraging the academic community, the general public and decision makers to elaborate on the policies to support the aging R&D field[19].

Such position papers and consultations can have tangible effects on public health policy and research policy, as evidenced by another position paper, jointly advanced by the International Society on Aging and Disease, American Federation for Aging Research, International Federation on Aging, International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics and other leading organizations on aging, entitled Aging health and R&D for healthy longevity must be included into the WHO Work Program (2018)[20]. Largely thanks to this position paper and the associated advocacy campaign, the subject of healthy aging that had been originally absent, was eventually included into WHOs 13th General Programme of Work for 2019-2023, including specific end points for the reduction of elderly disability and increasing their healthy life expectancy. The contribution of this advocacy campaign was acknowledged by the director of the WHO Ageing and Life Course Division[21]. Another position paper followed the recent establishment of the UNESCO-affiliated Executive Committee on Anti-Aging and Disease Prevention, entitled The urgent need for international action for anti-aging and disease prevention[22].

These are preliminary examples, and more of such position papers, guidelines and advocacy efforts are needed to advance the geroscience and healthy longevity field, both at the national and international levels. Authoritative and representative international organizations should take on this work, preparing and advocating policy suggestions and guidelines, creating educational materials and providing platforms for scientific cooperation in the geroscience and healthy longevity field.

Specifically, building on the experience of the Israeli program for Enhancing research, development and education for the promotion of healthy longevity and prevention of aging-related diseases within the Israel National Masterplan on Aging (see the previous section), such international organizations may consider advancing the following activities and policies, within specific countries and globally:

International organizations should advocate for a significant increase in the level of governmental and non-governmental funding for basic, applied, translational and clinical research and technological development for the mitigation of degenerative aging processes, aging-related chronic non-communicable diseases and disabilities, in order to extend the healthy and productive life expectancy for the entire population throughout the entire life course. Specifically, the international organizations should advocate for the allocation of defined significant percentages of the research and development budgets of the relevant budgeting frameworks to be dedicated explicitly for the geroscience and healthy longevity field, including bi-national and international research and development programs.

International organizations should create and expand academic and public education frameworks, programs and educational materials, considering the basic and applied research on aging processes and aging-related diseases, promoting healthy longevity, preventing aging-related diseases and improving the quality of life for the elderly, including biological, medical, technological, environmental and social aspects.

International organizations should develop and implement and/or advocate for the development and implementation of evidence-based evaluation criteria, measures and indicators to estimate the effects of aging, predict and detect at an early stage multiple aging-related diseases, and examine the effectiveness and safety of therapeutic and preventive interventions against them. Concomitantly, evaluation criteria, measures and indicators must be developed and advanced for the functional and employment capacity of the elderly and for the improvement of their functional capacity. Such evaluation criteria, measures and indicators should be used for establishing and/or improving public health systems for the early detection and prevention of degenerative aging processes and aging-related diseases.

Combined, these measures and policies should advance the geroscience and healthy longevity field, nationally and internationally, for the benefit of the elderly and the entire population.

References

[20] Stambler I, Jin K, Lederman S, Barzilai N, Olshansky SJ, Omokaro E, Barratt J, Anisimov VN, Rattan S, Yang S, Forster M, Byles J (2018). Aging health and R&D for healthy longevity must be included into the WHO Work Program. Aging and Disease, 9(2): 331-333 http://www.aginganddisease.org/article/2018/2152-5250/ad-9-2-331.shtml.

Ilia Stambler is an IEET Affiliate Scholar. He completed his PhD degree at the Department of Science, Technology and Society, Bar-Ilan University. His thesis subject, and his main interest, is the History of Life-extensionism in the 20th Century.

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Israel can and should become an important contributor to the international geroscience research, development, application and education - Institute...

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Podcast: A family on the frontier of hyper-personalized medicine – MIT Technology Review

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

Deep Tech is a new subscriber-only podcast that brings alive the people and ideas in our print magazine. Episodes will be released every two weeks. Were making the first four installments, built around our 10 Breakthrough Technologies issue, available for free.

Three-year-old Ipek Kuzu has an extremely rare genetic mutation that disrupts a protein needed for DNA repair, causing the loss of brain cells. Now shes become only the second person in the world to receive a customized antisense oligonucleotide drug designed to compensate for the DNA mistake by allowing her cells to splice together a functional version of the protein. The drug took Boston-based pediatrician and geneticist Tim Yu only months to create, heralding a new era of individualized genomic medicine. But it cost $2 million to manufacture and testleading to questions about how soon hyper-personalized treatments for rare genetic disorders can be made accessible and affordable. Journalist Erika Check Hayden got to know the Kuzu family, and in this episode she chronicles Ipeks journey, with help from Ipeks father Mehmet and Technology Review biomedicine editor Antonio Regalado.

Show notes and links:

If DNA is like software, can we just fix the code?, from the March/April 2020 print issue, p. 46

Hyper-personalized medicine, from the March/April 2020 print issue, p. 18

Sign up for The Download your daily dose of what's up in emerging technology

Two sick children and a $1.5 million bill: One family's race for a gene therapy cure, from the November/December 2018 print issue, October 23, 2018

Episode Transcript

Audio ID: This is MIT Technology Review.

Mehmet Kuzu: Around five to six months, they said she has something called ataxia telangectasia. And they said this doesnt have any cure. The initial days were very tough. We were crying all the time. So then after a while, we started investigating what can be done.

Wade Roush: Mehmet Kuzus three-year-old daughter, Ipek, has a rare genetic mutation that could end her life by age 25. But now shes getting a so-called antisense drug that her doctors engineered specifically for her. Which makes Ipek one of the first patients being swept up in a new wave of hyperpersonalized medicine. Journalist Erika Check Hayden wrote about the Kuzu family in the latest issue of Technology Review. And today, she helps us understand where this breakthrough came from, and how soon it might be scaled up. Im Wade Roush, and this is Deep Tech.

[Theme music]

Were right at the beginning of a revolution in individualized genomic medicine. And if you want to know what that revolution sounds like, this is a good place to start.

[Sound of Illumina sequencing machines]

Thats one of the hundreds of high-speed gene sequencing machines at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. Here at the Broads genomics platform in Cambridge there are so many of these machines that the institute can read the equivalent of 30 whole human genomes every 10 minutes.

There arent a lot of research centers with that kind of power. But in many places around the world its now possible to scan a babys full genome for just a few hundred dollars, and locate DNA coding errors that can cause rare conditions like ataxia telangectasia.

Thats how doctors diagnosed Ipek Kuzu when she was just six months old. The mistake in her DNA means her cells cant make a protein called ATM thats essential for DNA repair. Over the long run that causes the loss of brain cells, which means Ipek has some trouble walking and doesnt talk as much as a typical three-year-old.

Today Ipek is receiving an antisense drug made just for her. Its designed to compensate for the DNA mistake and restore production of ATM. Which makes her only the second person in the world to get this kind of treatment. The first was another little girl named Mila Makovec. She has different genetic disorder called Batten disease that causes blindness, seizures, and other neurodegenerative problems. And Mila got her own customized antisense drug starting in 2018.

But to understand how her doctors came up with these two medicines, and why this whole field of hyperpersonalized medicine is so hot that the editors of Technology Review decided to put it on this years list of 10 breakthrough technologies, we first have to jump back a few years, to 2016.

[CNBC Squawk Box news clip]

CNBC male anchor: Ionis Pharmaceuticals, in pre-market trading, is higher. The FDA has approved a drug called Spinraza. Spinraza.

CNBC female anchor: Its not Spine-raza?

CNBC male anchor: Maybe it is. Because its for spinal muscular atrophy. Its the first drug approved to treat the rare and fatal disease.

Wade Roush: Spinal muscular atrophy affects about 1 in 10,000 babies. So its not nearly as rare as Batten Disease or ataxia telangectasia. But Spinraza is literally the key to all of the more recent work to make customized antisense drugs for Mila and Ipek. So lets take a minute to go over how it works.

What made Spinraza a big deal is that it was one of the first successful medicines made using an antisense oligonucleotide. In other words, a customized strand of RNA.

Antonio Regalado: If you can imagine, inside a cell, there's the DNA.

Wade Roush: This is Antonio Regalado, the editor for biomedicine at Technology Review.

Antonio Regalado: And it kind of sends out these messages into the nucleus made of RNA and those are used as the templates to make proteins. And so antisense is a drug that acts at the level of RNA. They're going to stick to that RNA message and they could block it.

Wade Roush: Keep it from being translated.

Antonio Regalado: Keep it from being translated, or modify the translation in some fashion.

Wade Roush: In the cells of healthy people, theres a protein called SMN that helps motor neurons survive and grow. A gene called SMN1 carries the instructions for making that protein, and people with spinal muscular atrophy have a mutation that disables that gene. But it just so happens that human DNA also contains a second copy of the gene, called SMN2. This second copy is typically inactive, thanks to a small error that keeps the RNA message from being spliced together into a proper template. The Spinraza molecule contains a short segment of antisense RNA that prevents the splicing error. And that allows the body to start making the motor neuron protein.

Ionis Pharmaceuticals is the company that makes Spinraza, and they put a lot of work into figuring out how to get their molecule into cells in the brain and the nervous system, where it can do its work.

Antonio Regalado: And they finally mastered it and came up with pretty much kind of a miracle drug for one of these rare brain diseases that affects kids, spinal muscular atrophy. And so from that example, people then said, well, why can't we use antisense for other diseases that are similar?

And what we learned was that there was a doctor in Boston named Timothy Yu, who was an expert in sequencing genomes of sick children. And there was one girl named Mila Makovec. And her parents had come to him. He'd sequenced the genome. And then he just realized, I don't have to stop here. Once I've identified this defect, I don't have to stop. I could potentially make a drug. And so that's exactly what he did.

Wade Roush: It turned out that Milas disease was caused by a splicing error very similar to the one that causes spinal muscular atrophy, except that in Milas case it disrupts a different protein called CLN7. Tim Yus idea was to take the backbone of the Spinraza molecule and attach a customized strand of antisense RNA. With this new business end, so to speak, the drug would enable Milas cells to start making functional copies of the CLN7 protein.

Antonio Regalado: That was probably at that point just the clearest, starkest, most stunning example of this hyper personalized medicine. Because in this case, it was really for one person. So we were very interested in this phenomenon, because it's a reflection of what technology can do. And then in the middle of last year, a pretty prominent journalist, Erika Check Hayden, came to us and she was also interested and wanted to do some work to find the cases, find the families and write more stories about it. And as it developed, we decided, well, let's put this on our list of breakthrough technologies, because it really is. And so Erika ended up writing the piece and she did a lot of work to find the patients. One of the great things she did was to find this Kuzu family, which happens to be right here in Cambridge.

Wade Roush: Erika, could you introduce yourself and tell us a little bit about you?

Erika Check Hayden: Sure. My name is Erika Check Hayden. I'm a journalist based in San Francisco. And I also run the science communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Wade Roush: When you set out to start reporting this piece, did you feel like it was important to go beyond the first sort of headline-making case of Mila Makovec and look for additional patients who were going through this process to see how broadly applicable the whole idea is?

Erika Check Hayden: I do think that while people have been very impressed by Mila's case and by the drug that Tim Yu made for her, which is called milasen, I think there's also been this question of are we gonna be able to do this for other patients? And if so, you know, who is going to be treatable via this method? And so if I'm going out and finding other families that are hopefully replicating that success, I think is a really important statement about how impactful this approach might eventually be.

Wade Roush: So this is where the Kuzu family comes in. So could you tell us a little bit about them and how you got in touch with them?

Erika Check Hayden: So the Kuzu family, they originally came from Turkey and the father in the family, Mehmet Kuzu, is now a software engineer at Google. And they were living in Silicon Valley when their daughter Ipek was born. And soon after she was born, she was diagnosed with this disease called ataxia telangectasia, which is also called A-T disease. And when that happened, they set about trying to understand if there was anything they could do to treat the disease or slow the disease. And that's what led Mehmet down this path that eventually led him to work with Tim Yu.

Mehmet Kuzu: I sent the genetic report of our daughter. Then he said, oh, there's a potential here, but there are two main problems. He said this might cost around like two million, and the insurance will not cover it. The second problem, it might cause damage because, we have a theoretical idea, but biology is complicated. So at the end of the day, it might be worse than what is expected.

Wade Roush: Right. So for the Kuzu family, while it was obviously bad news that your kid is getting diagnosed with A-T disease, there is this amazing foundation or non-profit led by Brag Margus, the A-T Children's Project, that has all this data and also apparently has some fundraising clout. And they wind up helping to finance a lot of this research and even finance Ipeks treatment.

Erika Check Hayden: Right. And I think that's part of why this particular project was able to move so fast, because Brad Margus and the A-T Children's Project had done a lot of work over the years to fundraise and educate their community about the potential for treating this disease, so that when they found something that he actually thought could work, they were able to raise $1.4 million in a relatively short amount of time to fund the development of this unique drug.

Mehmet Kuzu: I think he understood to the promise of it. And then he agreed to financially support us. But the problem is this money in the pool is coming from many families. So we should have a fair selection. Then they found three kids that young in age, like three, two, two, three, four, with the right mutation type, and they got skin samples from all of them, and tested it. They were able to do it quickly.

Wade Roush: Mehmet can recount all these events pretty calmly. But I think its worth underscoring what a roller coaster the familys been on. The backing of the AT Childrens Project opened a window for Tim Yu to design and manufacture an antisense drug. But the required safety testing is so expensive that only there was only enough money to do that for one patient. There was a two in three chance that Ipek would not be that patient. And even if she did get selected, there was no way to know whether the treatment would be effective. Mila Makovec had been having fewer seizures since she started getting her antisense treatment, but doctors still werent 100 percent sure that it was because of the medicine. On top of all that, there was still the risk of unintended side effects.

Mehmet Kuzu: and then at the end of the day, Ipeks cells responded the best among these three candidates. Now, once we know we are selected, now we concentrate on second issue: do we really want to take this risk of, like, making things worse? And then I thought, like, most probably something good will happen. Of course there is a probability of, a possibility [of failure]. But imagine if that happens: science will learn from this. And her kind of sacrifice, and that would help, too, many other people.

Erika Check Hayden: It's been just incredible over the past few years to meet these families, understand what they're doing, how they're doing it. I've just been really struck by everything they've been able to accomplish. And also the mindset that they bring to this where, you know, you'll talk to, or I will talk to, parents who are doing this for their kids and they've had scientists tell them, 'You've got to be prepared for the possibility that this isn't going to help your kid. You know, you might be doing all of this work on behalf of some other future child. This might not come in time to help your own child.' And they persist and are really driven.

Wade Roush: Ok. So in the same way that Tim Yu helped to create this unique drug called milasen for Mila Makovec, he's created a drug called atipeksen for Ipek. If that drug if that drug works, how will it help Ipek?

Erika Check Hayden: If this drug works, basically what it's going to do is correct the way that Ipek's cells interpret her genetic information so that she will make a functioning copy of the ATM protein. Now, how we will know if this is working is a bit of a tricky question. So, Tim Yu and other doctors are going to try a variety of methods to see if they can tell whether the drug is actually helping her. So, for instance, they will look at things like can they see evidence in Ipek's body that the drug is actually making corrected versions of the protein? They will look for evidence that she isn't declining in the ways that we might expect her to if she wasn't getting treatment to help control her disease. But it might be tricky to tell whether it actually works or not.

Mehmet Kuzu: She had three injections until this point because they are starting with very low dose and escalating itAnd fortunately, we haven't seen any adverse effects in the first three. But like, of course, knowing if this is really working or not, they told us that it will take time. Maybe we need a year to understand if it's really working. But at least we have seen that no bad thing happened. At hospital she's going on the full anesthesia. They're putting on a mask. And after the injection they are taking bloods every four hours, three or four times. These are very stressful for her. She's fighting not to have this mask. She's crying a lot. Uh, but once discharge happens, once we come home, she forgets about everything. She just plays with her toys.

Wade Roush: Right. And this is one of the things you mentioned in your piece. Not only will it be tricky to see whether it's working or not, but we're talking about by definition an n of one study where there's only one patient. So you don't get the kinds of large numbers that help researchers feel more confident that a drug is safe and effective.

Erika Check Hayden: I think what we still don't know very well yet is which diseases are going to be helped most by this approach, or even if any of these individual customized treatments can cure a patient. So if you talk to Mila's mom, Julia Vitarello, she is very convinced that that drug has helped Mila. But I think accumulating that data to the level where we really know that this is a worthwhile approach, you know, that's probably going to take a while.

And to take a step back, I think that's part of the reason why these drugs are only being used right now in patients that have really severe progressive diseases, because you are taking a certain risk by giving a treatment to a patient when you haven't done the kinds of safety testing that we might be used to for a drug that would normally go through an FDA approval process. In fact, there are some people who object to even using the word treatment because we don't necessarily know that these drugs are going to cure the patients.

So in the meantime, I think everybody would like to see far more patients at least be able to try this. And so there's this question as to whether it's only going to be patients who have the resources to raise that money or access that money that are going to benefit. And I don't think anybody wants that to be the case.

Wade Roush: Are there any signs that the drug industry is looking at how to scale up some of these treatments? And, you know, maybe create a pipeline for hyper personalized drugs?

Erika Check Hayden: So we're seeing things like Ionis, their co-founder Stan Crooke has started a foundation called the n-Lorem Foundation that's going to try to develop these treatments for patients. The reason is that developing a drug for one patient that costs millions of dollars and doesn't really have a very large market is not something that's necessarily going to be attractive to a company. But I think people think there is a direction that could evolve where, you know, if the drug industry is better able to manufacture these drug templates or backbones and more easily switch out the part of the drug that's the business end that's doing the targeting of different genetic diseases to where that becomes much more large scale, much more customizable, much cheaper. You know, then you might see a model where this is much more economical, affordable, reimbursed by insurance companies, because right now this is not and obviously that's a major cost barrier.

Wade Roush: Do you think this is a time for patients with rare genetic disorders and families of those patients to feel more hopeful? Or is it just too early realistically for this to affect lots of people who are already suffering from these conditions?

Antonio Regalado: Right. It goes back to the question, should this be a breakthrough technology? Because right now, it's not helping that many people. We're talking about helping one person. Or we're talking about helping two or three very few people. Very few. And that's a strike against the idea, frankly. Like, why? Why should we invest resources into this when it helps so few people? Why should we call it a breakthrough technology? Well, the reason to is, it's sweet. Technically, it's sweet. And it paints a path towards a future where it like you can do a lot more with genetic drugs.

Wade Roush: So you can imagine a future not 100 years away, but maybe 10 years away, where this can be scaled up and broadened out to more patients.

Antonio Regalado: Yeah, absolutely. I mean, will the drugs work? How well will they work? It's kind of an open question. But yeah, we've already gone from one case to five cases next year no doubt it it'll be 10 and then a hundred and then thousands. Most likely. I want to raise something else, which this whole scenario is not fair. Because there's a lot of people with rare diseases and a lot of kids dying of rare disease in every neighborhood and every corner and every precinct of the country, of the world. So who has the opportunity to have this chance?

Wade Roush: Well, who does so far?

Antonio Regalado: Well, it is a very small subset of parents who for whatever reason have the ability to wrap their head around the science, to find where the opportunity is, and to raise quite a lot of money. And this is not bake sale money. This is two million dollars. Three million dollars. You have to really have a way to do that, and it favors people with a big network. That's why we're seeing people, you know, entrepreneurs from Silicon Valley or other people who just for whatever reason, manage to pull it off.

Wade Roush: If this kind of inequity persisted, it would definitely become a huge point of criticism around this whole area of therapy. But maybe you could look at these parents as the pioneers.

Antonio Regalado: Right. Exactly. A lot of the parents will say, well, in addition to trying to help my child, I also want to invest and try and create the process by which everybody else can be helped because they also have a lot of empathy for the next person. The idea is to help everybody. The pathway to doing that is not clear yet.

Wade Roush: All right. Well, whether this is a breakthrough or not, it raises so many interesting and thorny questions that it's perfect fodder for Technology Review.

Antonio: It's definitely a breakthrough, man. It's definitely a breakthrough.

Wade Roush: Okay. Thanks Antonio.

[Theme music]

Thats it for this edition of Deep Tech. This is a podcast were making exclusively for MIT Technology Review subscribers,to help bring alive some of the people and ideas youll find in the pages of our website and our print magazine. But the first four episodes cover our annual 10 breakthrough technologies issue, and were making those episodes free for everyone.

Deep Tech is written and produced by me and edited by Michael Reilly, with editorial help this week from Jennifer Strong. Our theme is by Titlecard Music and Sound in Boston. Special thanks this week to David Cameron, Howard Gelman, Erika Check Hayden, Mehmet Kuzu, Antonio Regalado, and Jane Wilkinson. Im Wade Roush. Thanks for listening, and we hope to see you back here for our next episode in two weeks.

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Podcast: A family on the frontier of hyper-personalized medicine - MIT Technology Review

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Henry Ford Receives $25M Grant to Expand Precision Medicine Program – HealthITAnalytics.com

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

March 11, 2020 -Henry Ford Health System has received a $25 million grant to accelerate its precision medicine program, with the ultimate goal of creating a Precision Health Center.

With the donation, Henry Ford will focus on advancing cancer research and treatment, as well as precision therapies for behavioral health, cardiovascular conditions, and metabolic diseases.

Henry Ford received the gift from developer Chris Jeffries and his wife Lisa. The donation is the largest single gift from an individual in the health systems 105-year history.

We are incredibly grateful to Lisa and Chris Jeffries for their generosity, saidWright Lassiter, III, president and CEO of Henry Ford Health System.

We are experiencing a momentous era in medicine, a radical shift from the traditional approach to cancer care. This gift will help us consolidate and advance our collective efforts to create unprecedented access to advanced, highly personalized treatments for our patients and members.

The grant will significantly boost the health systems translational research efforts, which quickly transforms the most innovative discoveries in the lab into new treatments for patients.

Translational research is a significant differentiator of our clinical programs at Henry Ford and is a critical element to help us treat many of the most challenging conditions our patients face, saidAdnan Munkarah, MD, executive vice president and chief clinical officer of Henry Ford Health System.

Translational research is bench-to-bedside, meaning it allows patients to benefit from discoveries in real time. That is an essential part of our history and commitment to medicine and academics not only offering the latest innovations in medicine, but also playing a leading role in their development.

The donation will build on the organizations past work to advance precision medicine and personalized care. In October 2017, Henry Ford Health System launched the Henry Ford Cancer Institute, a facility focused on ambulatory cancer treatment, precision medicine, clinical trials and research, and enhanced support services for cancer patients.

With the grant, researchers will be able to continue to develop individualized therapies for cancer and other conditions.

By analyzing genetic and non-genetic factors, we can gain a better understanding of how a disease forms, progresses and can be treated in a specific patient, saidTom Mikkelsen, MD, medical director of the Precision Medicine Program andClinical Trials Officeat Henry Ford Health System.

As of now, we can check for more than 500 genomic markers, which helps us understand the pattern of changes in a patients tumor cells that influence how cancer grows and spreads. Im confident this gift will lead to advancements that provide hope for patients with even the most complex diagnoses.

The Henry Ford Cancer Institute has one unified team of cancer specialists working to deliver personalized cancer treatments. The Institute includes five hospital locations, six additional outpatient cancer centers, and dozens of aligned doctors offices.

Even a decade ago, our approach to treating brain cancer was Precision Medicine before anyone knew what Precision Medicine was, said Steven Kalkanis, MD, CEO of Henry Ford Medical Group and Henry Fords chief academic officer.

In the time since, weve seen a significant increase in the number of brain cancer patients who are outliving their prognoses, due in large part to clinical innovation. Our relentless pursuit of clinical breakthroughs has more momentum now than at any other point in history.

The new grant will only serve to accelerate precision medicine in care delivery.

The support of our donors is the fuel behind our clinical innovations and the breakthroughs that are improving peoples lives, saidMary Jane Vogt, senior vice president and chief development officer at Henry Ford Health System. It is remarkable to work with donors who believe in a better tomorrow and the power of a unified approach to medicine.

The donation is expected to help drive innovations in treating brain, lung, pancreatic, and colon cancers, as well as other chronic diseases like cystic fibrosis, asthma, and heart disease.

The team at Henry Ford is second to none, said Chris Jeffries. We believe this gift will lead to other families having more time together. Defeating cancer requires a concerted effort from everyone and we hope to make as big an impact on that goal as possible.

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Henry Ford Receives $25M Grant to Expand Precision Medicine Program - HealthITAnalytics.com

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DNA Sequencing Industry Insights and Outlook to 2028 – Analysis of Applications in Healthcare, Oncology and Infections – Benzinga

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

Dublin, March 11, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "DNA Sequencing - Technologies, Markets & Companies" report from Jain PharmaBiotech has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The value of DNA sequencer market in 2018 is described with estimates for 2023 and 2028. Various methods and factors on which market estimates depend are described briefly. Markets are tabulated according to geographical areas as well as applications. Small sequencers form the basis of SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) analysis. Several marketing strategies have been outlined. The report includes profiles of 147 companies involved in sequencing and their 173 collaborations.

The report briefly reviews basics of human genome variations, development of sequencing technologies, and their applications. Current large and small sequencers are described as well as companies developing them. Various applications of sequencing are described including those for genetics, medical diagnostics, drug discovery and cancer.

Next generation sequencing technologies, both second and third generations, are reviewed. Companies developing software for analysis of sequencing data are also included. Selected academic institutes conducting research in sequencing are also listed.

Current market is mostly for research applications and future markets will be other applications related to healthcare.

Key Topics Covered

Executive Summary 1. Introduction2. DNA Sequencing Technologies3. Role of Bioinformatics in Sequencing4. Comparative Analysis of Sequencing Technologies5. Sequencing for Research6. Applications of Sequencing in Healthcare7. Applications of Sequencing in Oncology8. Sequencing in Genetic Disorders9. Sequencing in Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders10. Applications of Sequencing in Infections11. Role of Sequencing in Personalized Medicine12. Current Status and Future Prospects13. Markets for Sequencers14. Companies Involved in Sequencing15. References

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/8bubjr

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

Continued here:
DNA Sequencing Industry Insights and Outlook to 2028 - Analysis of Applications in Healthcare, Oncology and Infections - Benzinga

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Ethos Therapy Continues Global Expansion – PRNewswire

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 10, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Varian (NYSE: VAR) today announced Medisch Spectrum Twente Hospital in The Netherlands, and Icon Cancer Centre Wahroonga and Royal North Shore Hospital (RNSH) in Australia treated their first patients with Ethos therapy. Thisartificial intelligence (AI)-driven holistic adaptive therapy solution is designed to deliver an entire adapted treatment in a typical 15-minute timeslot.

Adaptive therapy provides the ability to personalize the patient's treatment based on their anatomy and position at the time of treatment. The goal is to better target the tumor, reduce dose to healthy tissue, and potentially improve overall outcomes.

At Medisch Spectrum Twente Hospital, the first two patients treated were for prostate cancer, at RNSH the first treatment was for head and neck cancer and at Icon Cancer Centre Wahroonga, the first treatment was for prostate cancer. Additionally, since delivering the first Ethos therapy in the world in September 2019, Herlev and Gentofte Hospitalin Denmark has already delivered 100 adaptive fractions for bladder cancer patients.

"Since the launch of Ethos therapy, the response from clinicians globally has been very strong," said Chris Toth, president Varian Oncology Systems. "Ethos therapy was designed to launch a new era of personalized adaptive radiation therapy and we are very pleased to see patients in Australia and The Netherlands now have access to these adaptive treatments. With Ethos therapy recently receiving 510(k) clearance, the first installation in the US is in process and will be treating patients soon."

Clinician Experience

"The future is adaptive," said Erik Van Dieren, head of Medical Physics, Medisch Spectrum Twente Hospital."With Ethos we know adaptive radiotherapy on a daily basis is achievable for a large number of patients due to high accuracy and excellent sparing of the healthy tissue in about 15 minutes treatment time."

"Early Ethos therapy experience from Icon is showing promising results," said Amy Teh, MD, radiation oncologist at Icon Cancer Centre, Wahroonga."In a prostate patient, where the target volume is highly dependent on bladder and rectal positioning, we have used the AI-driven online adaptive workflow on the Ethos platform to effectively and efficiently adapt to the new position of the bladder and rectum each day. This has allowed superior coverage of the true target. This technology marks another step forward in the advancement of radiation therapy taking personalized medicine to another level allowing us to ensure more dose to the tumor target, and less dose to surrounding healthy organs."

"RNSH is very pleased to enter the world of Ethos therapy after recently treating our first patient," said Jeremy Booth, head of Medical Physics, Northern Sydney Cancer Centre, RNSH. "The patient treatment for head and neck cancer was an exceptional experience, uniting our expert team of radiation therapists, medical physicists and radiation oncologists at the console to ensure we safely delivered the best treatment."

"We've found that, with bladder cancer patients, we are seeing the most impact using online adaptation," said Poul Geertsen, MD, PhD, head of Radiotherapy, Department of Oncology at Herlev and Gentofte Hospital. "With Ethos therapy, we are seeing treatment margin reductions of up to 50 percent, which is impressive."

The streamlined workflow of Ethos therapy is enabled by its AI-driven planning and contouring capabilities. Physicians define their clinical intent from pre-defined templates and the initial treatment plan is generated based on the physician's pre-defined clinical objectives. The treatment is adapted in response to changes in the patient's anatomy and the tumor's shape and position, at the time of treatment. The ability of Ethos to enable on-couch adaptive treatment puts the patient at the center of care.

Ethos therapy offers the use of multimodality images (MR, PET, CT) registered with daily iterative CBCT images at the console. By providing an up-to-date view of the patient's anatomy in multiple imaging modality views, Ethos therapy provides clinicians the confidence to make more informed adaptive treatment decisions. The solution is built on Varian's latest treatment delivery technology andprovides fast imaging and treatment delivery without compromising quality.

For more information on Ethos, visit http://www.varian.com/ethos.

About Varian

At Varian, we envision a world without fear of cancer. For more than 70 years, we have developed, built and delivered innovative cancer care technologies and solutions for our clinical partners around the globe to help them treat millions of patients each year. With an Intelligent Cancer Care approach, we are harnessing advanced technologies like artificial intelligence, machine learning and data analytics to enhance cancer treatment and expand access to care. Our 10,000 employees across 70 locations keep the patient and our clinical partners at the center of our thinking as we power new victories in cancer care. Because, for cancer patients everywhere, their fight is our fight. For more information, visit http://www.varian.comand follow @VarianMedSys on Twitter.

Customers were not paid for their testimonials. Individual results may vary

Press Contact

Mark PlungyDirector, Global Public Relations+1 (650) 424-5630 [emailprotected]

Investor Relations Contact

Anshul MaheshwariVice President, Investor Relations+1 (650) 424-5631 [emailprotected]

SOURCE Varian

https://www.varian.com/

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Ethos Therapy Continues Global Expansion - PRNewswire

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Global Therapeutic Drug Monitoring Industry Insights, 2018-2028: Unmet Needs and Strategies for Development – MENAFN.COM

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

(MENAFN - GlobeNewsWire - Nasdaq) Dublin, March 11, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) Technologies, Markets & Companies to 2028" report from Jain PharmaBiotech has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report deals with therapeutic drug monitoring, a multi-disciplinary clinical specialty, aimed at improving patient care by monitoring drug levels in the blood to individually adjust the dose of drugs for improving outcome. TDM is viewed as a component of personalized medicine that interacts with several other disciplines including pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics. One chapter is devoted to the monitoring of drugs of abuse (DoA). Various technologies used for well-known DoA are described. A section on drug abuse describes methods of detection of performance-enhancing drugs.

TDM market is analyzed from 2018 to 2028 according to technologies as well as geographical distribution. The global market for DoA testing was also analyzed from 2018 to 2028 and divided according to the area of application. Unmet needs and strategies for development of markets for TDM are discussed. The report contains profiles of 35 companies involved in developing tests and equipment for drug monitoring along with their collaborations. The text is supplemented with 21 tables, 9 figures and 210 selected references from the literature.

Benefits of the Report

The report contains information on the following:

Key Topics Covered Executive Summary

1. Introduction

2. Technologies for TDM

3. Drug Monitoring Instruments

4. Applications of TDM

5. Drugs Requiring Monitoring

6. Monitoring of Biological Therapies

7. Monitoring of Drug Abuse

8. Markets for TDM

9. Companies

10. References

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/pclxni

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

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Scientists developed the worlds most sophisticated lab model of the human body – Tech Explorist

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

Current practices in drug development have led to therapeutic compounds being approved for widespread use in humans, only to be later withdrawn due to unanticipated toxicity. These occurrences are mostly the result of erroneous data generated by in vivo and in vitro preclinical models that do not accurately recapitulate human physiology.

To speed up new drugs to market and reduce animal testing, scientists from the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM) have come up with a mindblowing solution. They have developed the worlds most sophisticated laboratory model of the human body, a system of miniaturized organs that can be used to detect harmful and adverse effects of drugs before they are prescribed to patients.

Scientists developed this system from many human cell types that are combined into human tissues representing a majority of the organs in the human body, such as the heart, liver, and lungs. Each of these miniature organs is tiny 3D tissue-like structures about one-millionth the size of an adult human organ.

Anthony Atala, MD, of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine and the studys senior author said,The most important capability of the human organ tissue system is the ability to determine whether or not a drug is toxic to humans very early in development and its potential use in personalized medicine. Weeding out problematic drugs early in the development or therapy process can save billions of dollars and potentially save lives.

During the experiment, this new model shows the potential of quantifying toxicity measure toxicity in many drugs approved for human use. Although toxicity from the recalled drugs was not found initially using standard 2D cell culture systems and animal testing models, and adverse effects were not detected throughout three levels of human clinical trials, this new system can readily detect toxicity, replicating the damage seen in humans.

To create the model, scientists isolated tiny samples of human tissue cells and engineered them into miniature versions of the human organ. These tissue cells can contain blood vessel cells, immune system cells, and even fibroblasts.

Each of these organs, also known as organ tissue equivalents, performs the same functions that they do in the human body. For example, the heart beats about 60 times each minute, the lung breaths the air from the surrounding environment, and the liver breaks down toxic compounds into harmless waste products.

Co-author Aleks Skardal, Ph.D., formerly of WFIRM and now at Ohio State University, said,We knew very early on that we needed to include all of the major cell types that were present in the original organ. To model the bodys different responses to toxic compounds, we needed to include all of the cell types that produce these responses.

Another exciting thing about the model that each system contains media, a substance containing nutrients and oxygen that is circulated among all the organ types, delivering oxygen, and removing waste. The small blood system n these devices use a technology called microfluidics to recirculate test compounds through the organ system and remove the drug breakdown products that each organ is producing.

Co-author Thomas Shupe, Ph.D., of WFIRM, said,Creating little human organs for drug testing was a logical extension of the work we have accomplished in building human-scale organs. Many of the same technologies we have developed at the human-scale level, like including a very natural environment for the cells to live in, also produced excellent results when brought down to the microscopic level.

Additional co-authors include Julio Aleman, Steven Forsythe, Shiny Rajan, Sean Murphy, Mahesh Devarasetty, Nima Pourhabibi Zarandi, Goodwell Nzou, Robert Wicks, Hooman Sadri-Ardekani, Colin Bishop, Shay Soker, and Adam Hall.

Authors Skardal, Shupe, Soker, Murphy, Bishop, and Atala are inventors on patent rights related to this work owned by Wake Forest University Health Sciences. The patents, whose value may be affected by publication, have the potential to generate royalty income in which the inventors would share.

The study is published in the journal Biofabrication.

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3 steps to add annual Medicare wellness visits in your practice – American Medical Association

Wednesday, March 11th, 2020

Medicare now recognizes the important work that primary care physicians do when it comes to preventive screenings in older patients. So instead of only paying doctors for sick visits, the program will pay physicians to perform a preventive annual Medicare wellness visit (AWV).

But physicians should make some adjustments to their practices to ensure they adapt to what is the first of several Medicare changes intended to promote preventive care and improve care coordination and chronic disease management for Medicare patients.

The AMA STEPS Forward module Medicare Annual Wellness Visit (AWV): Streamline Workflow to Perform a Thorough AWV helps physicians understand the AWV, communicate with patients to set expectations about the visit and map out an AWV workflow.

TheAMAsSTEPS Forward open-access modules offerinnovative strategies that allow physicians and their staff to thrive in the new health care environment. These courses can help you prevent physician burnout, create the organizational foundation for joy in medicine and improvepractice efficiency.

The AWV is a primary care visit that involves preventive care, advanced care planning and depression and dementia screening. It gives physicians a chance to focus on safety issues, such as falls, and social needs, such as food insecurity and transportation. Physicians and their teams can update information in a patients chart, such as a medication list, or they can create and maintain a personalized screening and prevention plan.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is recognizing that these visits help enhance a patients quality of life and that they are different from traditional sick visits. Identifying mental health concerns, cognitive impairments and other factors often involves in-depth conversations and non-face-to-face work. And physician offices can set up a system where all members of the care team contribute to the effort, maximizing patient benefit, practice pay and time savings.

Here are three steps to optimize annual wellness visits in your practice.

An annual wellness visit is different from the initial preventive physical examination, known as the IPPE. AWVs are offered to patients 12 months after they enroll in Medicare Part B and they are then covered once every 12 months.

Numerous components are part of the initial AWV, including screening for cognitive impairment and reviewing functional ability and level of safety. Nonphysician members of the care team can perform most of the components; the physicians role is to synthesize the findings and provide recommendations. During subsequent visits, the information is reviewed and updated.

Make clear this visit is not the same as an annual physical and doesnt include a physical exam. Medicare covers the AWV 100%, but any evaluation and management (E/M) work done during the visit is subject to copays, deductibles and coinsurance.

An AWV is covered only once every 12 months, so if a patient has had one elsewhere in that timeframe, they are not eligible for another one from your office.

First, physician offices will need to decide whether to combine AWV and problem-based visits. The STEPS Forward module then offers a sample process map as guidance on how to map out each step of the visit.

For example, if an office chooses to combine an AWV with E&M, the module outlines how to conduct and document the visit using both AWV and E&M templates.

TheCMEmodule, Medicare Annual Wellness Visit (AWV) Streamline Workflow to Perform a Thorough AWV,is enduringmaterial and designated by the AMA for a maximum of0.5AMA PRA Category 1 Credit.

The module is part of theAMA EdHub,anonline platformwith top-quality CME and education that supports the professional development needs of physicians and other health professionals. With topics relevant to you, it also offers an easy, streamlined way to find, take, track and report educational activities.

Learn more aboutAMA CME accreditation.

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Genomics Research Market Worth to Exceed $31 Billion by 2027 – Clinical OMICs News

Tuesday, March 10th, 2020

The field of genomics has made fantastic progress in the fields of biomedical research and clinical development. This is good news for patients and excellent news for investors, as the field of genomics is expected to pay large dividends in finance in the coming decade.

Despite being a relatively new field in the space of biology research, genomics has made massive advances in science and medicine in the past few years. Research into the human genome has led to the development of personalized medicine, changing the clinical landscape for cancer treatment and rare genetic diseases, in particular. The cost associated with mapping one genome has dramatically dropped in a very short space of time, costing millions of dollars and years of effort at the start to now costing in the hundreds of dollars per sequence that is delivered in a matter of days. This has allowed worldwide entry into this space, and an explosion of new discoveries and advances.

The global genomics market size is expected to reach USD 31.1 billion by 2027, registering a CAGR of 7.7% over the forecast period, according to a new report by Grand View Research, Inc. Significant changes in disease management processes along with advancements in genomics and personalized medicine are expected to propel the market.

Grand View Research is a U.S.-based market research and consulting company, providing syndicated as well as customized research reports and consulting services. Headquartered in San Francisco, the companys analysts and consultants report in-depth analysis on 46 industries across 25 major countries worldwide. With the help of an interactive market intelligence platform, Grand View Research helps Fortune 500 companies and renowned academic institutes understand the global and regional business environment.

The report that was recently published makes several suggestions as to what is anticipated to be leading this growth. The consumables and reagents deliverable segment is expected to register the highest growth rate, owing to high costs and volume associated with reagents needed for sequencing. This field is filled by companies that service actual research companies, and oftentimes are the main operating costs of lab testing.

The computational services deliverable segment is also set to expand at a considerable CAGR from 20202027 owing to the increasing demand for computational sequence alignment and analysis among molecular biologists. Interpreting sequencing data is a somewhat complicated process, and software and people capable of interpreting the results are at an ever-increasing demand in this space.

In terms of investment into future research and development for predictive biomarkers targeted toward diagnosis and patient monitoring, substantial investments by biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies have contributed significantly to the revenue generated by the biomarker discovery application segment. Clinical trials using genomics sequencing have oftentimes been wildly successful, driving more and more disease-based research to consider its use for new treatment strategies, as well as a search for biomarkers at a breakneck speed.

The success of use of genomic sequencing is a worldwide affair, and the Asian Pacific region is a potentially lucrative market for genomics, and is anticipated to expand at the highest CAGR of 9.1%. Regionally, genomics is being used everywhere, particularly in North America and Europe, but also in Asia, South America, the Middle East, and Africa.

Key companies in the genomics market tend to be located in the United States or Europe, and the largest players include 23andMe; F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.; BGI; Myriad Genetics Inc.; Danaher.; Pacific Biosciences; Illumina; Agilent Technologies; Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.; Foundation Medicine; Oxford Nanopore Technologies; and Bio-Rad Laboratories.

Of these companies, an increasing pool of market innovators mostly from 23andMe, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, and Veritas Genetics (each having launched breakthrough genomic technologies in recent years) are also contributing toward market development. 23andMe in particular has expertise in developing direct-to-consumer genomic tests targeted toward disease prognosis and has received FDA approval for its commercialization.

MinION, a sequencing device from Oxford Nanopore Technologies, is witnessing significant traction owing to its ability to sequence any fragment length of DNA in real time. In the same field, Veritas Genetics is offering an affordable solution for a complete readout of a genomic sequence. A few years ago, it was only possible to procure this information if ordered by a doctor, but now these tests can be taken by anyone curious about their DNA and costs approximately USD 1,000. Veritas Genetics has also begun the commercialization of this technique for newborns genomic sequencing applications in China.

Genomic sequencing and biomarker identification is hardly the only source of income in the field of genomics. Other deliverables besides products and services include functional genomics in basic laboratory research and aspects of costs associated; the study of epigenetics and computer data analysis associated with large data sets; and genomics end-use, in clinical and research laboratories, academic and government institutes, hospitals and clinics, and of course pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.

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Lonza partners with three institutes on Cocoon system – BioPharma-Reporter.com

Tuesday, March 10th, 2020

Institutes participating in the partnership include the Stanford University School of Medicine, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, and Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy.

The Cocoon platform is a closed automated cell therapy manufacturing platform enabling decentralized process development. A transportable cassette that internalizes all of the media, agents, and consumables used in the process is attached inside and the Cocoon closes and begins processing.

Each Cocoon develops therapy for one patient, therefore the technology is patient-scale, and the process can be scaled with many Cocoons, attached on Cocoon trees operating at the same time.

Under the agreement, Lonzas experts will work collaboratively with research teams of the partners to transfer some of their existing cell-based immunotherapies, which are in pre-clinical phase, to the Cocoon bioprocessing system.

Subsequently, the process development will be shared between the partners facilities and Lonzas R&D site in Shady Grove (MD), US.

Once these therapies enter the clinic, whether manufacturing is at the institutes or elsewhere, the Cocoon platform will enable this, Eytan Abraham, head of personalized medicine at Lonza, told us.

Asked about the potential immunotherapies examined, Abraham said that they target a combination of hematological malignancies, solid malignancies, and processes that use non-viral delivery of the gene of interest.

Use of the Cocoon technology can potentially benefit the organizations development projects in several ways, including increased process control, reductions in costs, manpower, time and space requirements, as well as offering superior scalability thereby enabling treatment of larger patient populations.

Further than that, Lonza expects the partnerships to help assess the technology and evaluate the platforms potential to manufacture a range of cell therapies comparable to those manufactured through other processes currently available.

Through these collaborations we are both showcasing the Cocoon advantages and capabilities, but also learning what is needed for decentralized based manufacturing of the next wave of patient scale cell therapies, Abraham told us.

He added that, accordingly, the company will continue to evolve the system to answer these needs, whether they increase cell numbers, improve in-process analytics, integration of additional technologies, such as magnetic cell separation and electroporation, or scaling technologies.

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ImmersiveTouch Partners with HP on Virtual Reality and 3D Printing for Personalized Health Care Solutions – Yahoo Finance

Tuesday, March 10th, 2020

Collaboration to focus on improving outcomes, increasing patient satisfaction and reducing costs

CHICAGO, March 5, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- ImmersiveTouch has announced a collaboration with HP that strives to unleash the power of personalized medicine by providing the missing link between medical imaging and real-time surgery. This collaboration will pair ImmersiveTouch clinical software with HP hardware to create better healthcare outcomes at reduced costs. The companies will jointly showcase their technologies at the annual HIMSS conference in Booth 1541 from March 10th-12th.

ImmersiveTouch is revolutionizing personalized care by designing technology that more accurately simulates each patient's specific anatomy in 360 VR. Surgeons can feed traditional CT and MRI scans into ImmersiveTouch software, strap on virtual reality headsets, and then virtually fly through simulations of muscles, bones and blood vessels, exploring the specific dimensions of the disease they must attack from every angle. ImmersiveTouch continually strives towards increased patient satisfaction and improved surgical planning, and away from longer procedure times, sub-optimal patient outcomes and readmissions.

From radiology to surgery, the companies plan to combine their clinical software and hardware expertise to market products and solutions that can be customized to the needs of an individual patient. In the near-term, the collaboration will focus on promoting ImmersiveTouch software powered by HP's Reverb Pro VR headsets and connected to HP Jet Fusion 3D printers.

"ImmersiveTouch and HP together will shift the paradigm for high quality virtual reality experiences in healthcare," said Jay Banerjee, COO of ImmersiveTouch. "We are immersing surgeons to train and rehearse for mission-critical situations. The industry is poised to enter a new era of personalized care."

ImmersiveTouch has been installed in over 100 hospitals globally and is proud to facilitate personalized care through its technological innovation.

Recently at MetroHealth Hospital in Cleveland, a neurosurgeon was able to confirm his suspicion from the initial radiological report after reviewing the case with ImmersiveTouch. After the immersive planning session, the surgeon altered his surgical approach and was more accurately prepared.

In the spirit of the HIMSSmission to "realize the full health potential of every human, everywhere", ImmersiveTouch will invite one of its pioneer enterprise customers, Dr. Shafiq Rab, CIO of Rush Hospital, to speak on the HIMSS panel session titled "3D Print & VR: Improving Surgical Outcomes & Informed Consent".

About ImmersiveTouch Inc.

ImmersiveTouch strives to strengthen human life and unleash the power of personalized care by providing the missing link between medical imaging and real-time surgery. ImmersiveTouch is using the latest advancements in computer vision,artificial intelligenceand AR/VR to develop FDA cleared medical technology. The company provides a fullsoftware suite for surgical planning, surgery skills training, and informed patient consent. http://www.immersivetouch.com

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Global Biomarkers Market Outlook, 2020-2027 – Featuring Profiles of Key Players Abbott, Roche, Qiagen, Siemens Healthcare, Thermo Fisher Scientific,…

Tuesday, March 10th, 2020

Dublin, March 10, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Biomarkers Market Size, Share & Trends Analysis Report by Type (Safety, Efficacy, Validation), by Application (Diagnostic, Drug Development, Personalized Medicine), by Disease, and Segment Forecasts, 2020-2027" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The global biomarkers market size is expected to reach over USD 129.4 billion by 2027. It is anticipated to exhibiting a CAGR of 13.7%, during the forecast period. Factors, such as increasing collaborations and funds for R&D activities, rising consumer awareness, a widening patient base, and technological advancements collectively augmenting market growth.

The drug discovery segment contributed the highest revenue in 2019. Pharmaceutical companies focus on extensive R&D initiatives for the development of targeted therapeutics. Coordinated strategic efforts on biomarker development remain a searing trend among drug manufacturers, academic research institutions, commercial R&D organizations, non-profitable health foundations, and federal government biomedical regulatory and research agencies.

North America continued to lead the biomarkers market in 2019, driven by an amplifying demand for personalized medicines, high disease prevalence, and proactive government initiatives. It is expected to maintain its lead over the forecast period. Asia Pacific is positioned to witness the fastest CAGR, over the forecast period, spearheaded by India.

Some key market players include Abbott, Roche, Qiagen, Siemens Healthcare, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Johnson & Johnson Services, Agilent Technologies, and Epigenomics. The players are developing novel kits and therapies and drugs to target population in the areas with high unmet clinical needs.

Further key findings from the study suggest:

Key Topics Covered

Chapter 1 Methodology and Scope

Chapter 2. Executive Summary

Chapter 3. Biomarkers Market Variables, Trends & Scope3.1. Biomarkers Market Lineage Outlook3.1.1. Clinical Diagnostics Market Outlook3.2. Penetration & Growth Prospect Mapping3.3. Regulatory Framework3.3.1. Reimbursement Framework3.3.2. Standards & Compliances3.4. Market Dynamics3.4.1. Market Driver Analysis3.4.1.1. Increasing Prevalence of Chronic Diseases3.4.1.2. Technological Advancements3.4.1.3. Funding for Biomarkers3.4.2. Market Restraint Analysis3.4.2.1. Reimbursement Policies3.5. Biomarkers Market Analysis Tools3.5.1. Industry Analysis - Porter's3.5.2. PESTEL Analysis3.5.3. Major Deals & Strategic Alliances Analysis

Chapter 4. Biomarkers Market - Competitive Analysis4.1. Recent Developments & Impact Analysis, by Key Market Participants4.2. Company/Competition Categorization (Key Innovators, Market Leaders, Emerging Players)4.3. Vendor Landscape4.3.1. List of Key Distributors and Channel Partners4.3.2. Key Company Market Share Analysis, 20194.4. Public Companies4.4.1. Company Market Position Analysis (Revenue, Geographic Presence, Product Portfolio, Key Serviceable Industries, Key Alliances)4.4.2. Company Market Share4.4.3. Competitive Dashboard Analysis4.4.4. Market Differentiators4.4.5. Synergy Analysis: Major Deals & Strategic Alliances4.5. Private Companies4.5.1. List of Key Emerging Companies4.5.2. Regional Network Map4.5.3. Company Market Position Analysis (Geographic Presence, Product Portfolio, Key Alliance, Industry Experience)

Chapter 5. Biomarkers Market: Type Estimates & Trend Analysis5.1. Definitions & Scope5.2. Type Market Share Analysis, 2019 & 20275.3. Biomarkers Market, by Type, 2015 to 20275.4. Market Size & Forecasts and Trend Analyses, 2015 to 2027 for the following:5.4.1. Safety5.4.2. Efficacy5.4.3. Validation

Chapter 6. Biomarkers Market: Application Estimates & Trend Analysis6.1. Definitions & Scope6.2. Application Market Share Analysis, 2019 & 20276.3. Biomarkers Market, by Application, 2015 to 20276.4. Market Size & Forecasts and Trend Analyses, 2015 to 2027 for the following:6.4.1. Diagnostics6.4.2. Drug Development6.4.3. Personalized Medicine

Chapter 7. Biomarkers Market: Disease Estimates & Trend Analysis7.1. Definitions & Scope7.2. Disease Market Share Analysis, 2019 & 20277.3. Biomarkers Market, by Disease, 2015 to 20277.4. Market Size & Forecasts and Trend Analyses, 2015 to 2027 for the following:7.4.1. Cancer7.4.2. Cardiovascular Disease7.4.3. Neurological Disease7.4.4. Immunological Disease7.4.5. Others7.5. Disease Market, by Type, 2015-2027:7.5.1. Cancer7.5.2. Cardiovascular Diseases7.5.3. Neurological Disease7.5.4. Imunological Disease7.5.5. Others

Chapter 8 Biomarkers Market: Regional Estimates & Trend Analysis8.1 Biomarkers Market: Regional Movement Analysis, 2019 & 20278.2 Biomarkers Market: Leading Players, 20198.3 SWOT Analysis, by Factor (Political & Legal, Economic and Technological)8.4 North America8.5 Europe8.6 Asia-Pacific8.7 Latin America8.8 MEA

Chapter 9 Competitive Landscape9.1 Strategy Framework9.2 Heat Map Analysis of Private Companies9.3 F-Hoffman La Roche Ltd.9.4 Abbott9.5 Epigenomics AG9.6 General Electric Company9.7 Johnson & Johnson9.8 Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.9.9 Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc.9.10 Siemens Healthcare Private Limited9.11 Qiagen

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/1r1wle

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Blue Shield of California Becomes First Health Plan in U.S. to Cover Cost of Rapid Whole Genome Sequencing for Critically Ill Children – P&T Community

Monday, March 9th, 2020

OAKLAND, Calif.and SAN DIEGO, March 9, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Blue Shield of California has become the first health plan in the United States to cover rapid and ultra-rapid Whole Genome Sequencing to help critically ill babies and children in intensive care with unexplained medical conditions receive precision care.

Rady Children's Institute for Genomic Medicine researchers have pioneered the fastest use of this advanced diagnostic technology to rapidly identify and decode the root causes of rare genetic disorders for some of the sickest infants and children hospitalized in intensive care across the country.

The Rady Children's Institute team offers the quickest turnaround of genomic test results available nationwide, delivering a preliminary diagnosis in less than three days for medically urgent cases. The blood samples can be taken at any hospital and sent to Rady Children's Institute for sequencing and analysis.

"Our system is optimized to identify or rule out most genetic diseases in a single test, and provide the medical team at the bedside with child-specific, disease-specific information so they can make better, faster medical decisions," said Stephen Kingsmore, M.D., DSc, president and CEO of the Institute.

Whole genome sequencing scans a child's entire genetic makeup for thousands of anomalies from a blood sample. Rady Children's specialists also provide consultation to the medical team caring for the patient to offer targeted guidance that can enable timely and precise personalized care.

"We know that uncertainty and long testing wait times can create tremendous risks for children in intensive care, and anxiety for their families, all the while creating more challenges for physicians and specialists," said Terry Gilliland, M.D., executive vice president of Healthcare Quality and Affordability at Blue Shield of California. "By providing our members with access to Rady Children's Institute for Genomic Medicine's pioneering work in rapid whole genome sequencing, we're supporting them in what is often the most difficult time in their lives."

Blue Shield members with Individual and Family Plans or employer-sponsored health plans who have a critically ill child, up to age 18, hospitalized in neonatal or pediatric intensive care at any location with an undiagnosed condition may be eligible.

This is the latest example of Blue Shield's leadership in making the newest evidence-based medical technologies and services available to its members.

The nonprofit health plan also was the first insurer to cover confirmatory testing for members who received a positive Ashkenazi Jewish BRCA finding from consumer genetic-testing companies such as 23andMe, as well as prostate gene expression assays for patients with low risk prostate cancer, helping them to avoid unnecessary radiation treatment and surgical intervention.

Without medical insurance coverage, access to rapid Whole Genome Sequencing is often not readily available for many hospitalized children who could potentially benefit from this service. Families in need of this care have often had to rely upon funding provided by private philanthropy and research grants to gain access to rapid Whole Genome Sequencing and associated precision care.

"Genetic disease is a leading cause of infant death in the U.S. and Blue Shield is paving the way in providing coverage for this rapid, molecular diagnosis that can result in life-saving treatments," Dr. Kingsmore said.

Located on the campus of Rady Children's Hospital-San Diego, the Institute houses a state-of-the-art genome sequencing lab and employs a multi-disciplinary team of experts who specialize in providing timely and accurate guidance to physicians caring for children with rare genetic disease.

About Blue Shield of CaliforniaBlue Shield of California strives to create a healthcare system worthy of our family and friends that is sustainably affordable. Blue Shield of California is a tax paying, nonprofit, independent member of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association with over 4 million members, 6,800 employees and more than $20 billion in annual revenue. Founded in 1939 in San Francisco and now headquartered in Oakland, Blue Shield of California and its affiliates providehealth, dental, vision, Medicaid and Medicare healthcare service plans in California. The company has contributed more than $500 million to Blue Shield of California Foundation since 2002 to have an impact on California communities.

For more news about Blue Shield of California, please visitnews.blueshieldca.com. Or follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter, or Facebook.

About Rady Children's Institute for Genomic MedicineThe Institute is leading the way in advancing precision healthcare for infants and children through genomic and systems medicine research. Discoveries at the Institute are enabling rapid diagnosis and targeted treatment of critically ill newborns and pediatric patients at Rady Children's Hospital-San Diego and partner hospitals. The vision is to expand delivery of this life-saving technology to enable the practice of precision pediatric medicine at children's hospitals across California, the nation and the world. RCIGM is a subsidiary of Rady Children's Hospital and Health Center. Learn more at http://www.RadyGenomics.org. Follow us on Twitterand LinkedIn.

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Cloud Computing in Cell Biology, Genomics and Drug Development – Benzinga

Monday, March 9th, 2020

New York, March 09, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Cloud Computing in Cell Biology, Genomics and Drug Development" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05873501/?utm_source=GNW The report analyzes trends and dynamics including drivers, limitations, challenges and opportunities.

The report discusses strategies adopted by emerging market players with recommendations for new market entrants.This research study discusses historical, current and potential market size.

The report will help market players and new entrants to make informed decisions about the production and export of goods and services, as well as providing organizations, distributors and exporters information about market development and trends.The study segments the market on the basis of applications and end uses.

A geographical market analysis is provided for all major segments.

Report Includes: - 43 data tables and 18 additional tables - An overview of the global market for cloud computing applications in cell biology, genomics and drug development - Analyses of global and regional market trends, with data from 2018 to 2019, and projections of compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) through 2024 - Assessment of market trends and opportunities, key developments and the impact of cloud computing technology on the biotechnology, pharmaceutical and healthcare industry verticals - Insight into recent developments in cloud infrastructure and information pertaining to key partnerships between cloud service providers and pharma/biotech companies and investment in pharmaceutical R&D sector - Discussion of the suppliers' landscape, as well as the market positioning and strategies of key manufacturers and suppliers for cloud computing applications - Review of patent applications filed regarding cloud computing technology in the U.S. healthcare sector - Company profiles of the leading market players, including Amazon Web Services (AWS) Inc., Cisco Systems Inc., DXC Technology, Google LLC, Salesforce.com Inc., and SAP SE

Summary The global market for cloud computing in cell biology, genomics and drug development is estimated to grow at a CAGR of REDACTED during the forecast period.The market was valued at REDACTED in 2018 and is expected to reach REDACTED in 2024.

In biomedical research, cloud computing has resolved big data concerns and improves data, analytics, collaboration and sharing. Increasing biomedical research based on human, animal, plants, and microbes has increased the dependency on proper storage and network infrastructure as well as secure and scalable computing.

With growing big data concerns, researchers are inclined towards cloud computing platforms.These platforms provide flexibility to users to pay according to their usage of cloud services including software, hardware infrastructure and platforms to solve biomedical computation concerns.

The cloud offers ondemand storage and an analysis facility to users which makes it an emerging computing platform to address big data concerns.Owing to the flexibility and cost-effectiveness, cloud services are gaining significant importance in life science research for data storage, communication and collaboration with stakeholders.

On cloud platforms, large datasets and applications for gene sequencing, image analysis, protein folding and data mining can be shared for collaborative research between facilities.

The major pivotal factors contributing to the growth of the market include rising genomics and proteomics research and the increasing number of clinical trials performed across various countries.Considerable public and private investment in genomics and proteomics research is providing support to biotechnology start-ups and research institutes.

This helps healthcare providers to develop and commercialize genomics technologies and personalized medicines. Increasing U.S. FDA approvals for personalized medicines are supporting the growth in genomics research. For example, according to the Personalized Medicine Coalition, in 2018, approximately REDACTED of the REDACTED new molecular entities (NMEs) approved by the FDA are personalized medicines which constitute REDACTED of all new drug approvals. The Coalition classified REDACTED of NMEs as personalized medicines in 2017, REDACTED in 2015 and REDACTED in 2016. The U.S. FDA is making efforts to facilitate access to genomic testing and integration of real-world evidence into its regulatory framework. As a result, the FDA has begun to authorize the marketing of cancer-related genetic tests, and pharmacogenetics were allowed to be sold directly to the consumers. This has resulted in the development of personalized medicine as an emerging practice of medicine that utilizes the genetic profile of an individual to make appropriate decisions regarding prevention, diagnosis and treatment of the condition. Gaining complete knowledge about the patient's genetic profile helps doctors to choose proper therapy or medication and to administer it with the proper regimen or dose. Significant data is generated by sequencing a single human genome which necessitates the adoption of cloud services. The 1000 Genomes Project is an effort to sequence genomes of at least a thousand people from across the globe to develop the most comprehensive and medically relevant picture of human genetic variation. This initiative intends to make genomic data easily accessible from international research institutions. Major support for the project is offered by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hinxton, England and the Beijing Genomics Institute, Shenzhen (BGI Shenzhen) in China.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05873501/?utm_source=GNW

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Cloud Computing in Cell Biology, Genomics and Drug Development - Benzinga

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Invicro Collaborates with Yale’s Dr. David Rimm to Expand the Utility of Quanticell for Clinical Pathology Applications – Business Wire

Monday, March 9th, 2020

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Invicro LLC, a Konica Minolta Company announced it has entered into a strategic research partnership with industry leading pathologist, Dr. David Rimm, MD, PhD, at The Yale University School of Medicine to advance the development of Quanticell, Konica Minoltas proprietary tissue biomarker detection technology.

Invicro is a global provider of imaging biomarkers, core lab services, CAP-CLIA pathology services, advanced analytics and software solutions for drug discovery and development. Dr. Rimm is the Professor of Pathology and Medicine; Director of Pathology Tissue Services; and Director of Translational Pathology at Yale University.

Quanticell is an ultra-sensitive, quantitative, amplification-free technology that detects proteins at the cellular and subcellular level using photostable, highly bright phosphor-integrated dots (PIDs). This nanoparticle-based detection technology circumvents the limitations observed with traditional multiplex chromogenic and fluorescent-based assays, such as signal saturation, non-linearity and high background.

With his unmatched knowledge and experience in anatomical pathology, product commercialization, and late-stage clinical trials, Dr. Rimm is a leading pioneer in the quantitative pathology space, said Dr. Ken Bloom, Chief Medical Officer for Advance Pathology Solutions for Invicro. We could not be happier to have him as a scientific research partner. I am highly confident that his efforts will support the advancement of Quanticell for specific drug development initiatives.

Chromogenic-based Immunohistochemistry (IHC) is ubiquitously used in research and clinical practice, including companion diagnostics (CDx). Despite IHCs wide use, underperforming assays often require additional molecular testing due to narrow detection range. With expertise in quantitative and digital pathology and having invented the AQUA technology for predicting response to therapies or recurrence in a myriad of disease indications, Dr. Rimm and his research team will evaluate a multitude of assay conditions to assess Quanticells technology performance for quantifying HER-2 expression across a much wider dynamic range.

I am thrilled to be working on this cutting-edge technology that has the potential to revolutionize molecular drug target testing that will in turn maximize therapeutic efficacy and reduce undesired toxicity, said Dr. Rimm. In previous studies performed in my laboratory, we have found that HER-2 protein expression spanned three logs of dynamic range and discovered DAB-based methods typically only show a linear range of one log, which we hypothesize can be addressed with Konica Minoltas novel detection technology.

About Invicro

Headquartered in Boston, MA, Invicro was founded in 2008 with offices, laboratories and clinics around the world, from coast-to-coast within the United States, to Europe and Asia that support leading pharmaceutical and biotechnology and top research universities. Invicros multi-disciplinary team provides solutions to help enhance the discovery and development of life-changing drugs across all stages of the drug development pipeline (Phase 0-IV), leveraging all modalities within a broad scope of therapeutic areas, including neurology, oncology, cardiology, and immunology. Invicros quantitative biomarker services, advanced analytics tools, and clinical operational services are backed by their industry-leading software informatics platforms, VivoQuant and iPACS.

Invicro is a Konica Minolta company and part of their precision medicine initiative, which aims to accelerate personalized medicine, discover novel therapeutic targets and develop innovative therapeutic technologies for unmet medical needs. Along with their sister company, Ambry Genetics, Invicro develops and leverages the latest approaches in quantitative biomarkers including imaging, quantitative pathology and genomics. Visit http://www.invicro.com for more information.

About Konica Minolta

Konica Minolta, Inc. (Konica Minolta) is a global digital technology company with core strengths in imaging and data analysis, optics, materials, and nanofabrication. Through innovation, Konica Minolta creates products and digital solutions for the betterment of business and societytoday and for generations to come. Across its Business Technologies, Healthcare, and Industrial-facing businesses, the company aspires to be an Integral Value Provider that applies the full range of its expertise to offer comprehensive solutions to the customers most pressing problems, works with the partners to ensure the solutions are sustainable, anticipates and addresses tomorrows issues, and tailors each solution to meet the unique and specific needs of its valued customers. Leveraging these capabilities, Konica Minolta contributes to productivity improvement and workflow change for its customers and provides leading-edge service solutions in the IoT era. Headquartered in Tokyo and with operations in more than 50 countries, Konica Minolta has more than 43,000 employees serving approximately two million customers in over 150 countries. Konica Minolta is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, (TSE4902). For further information, visit: https://www.konicaminolta.com/

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Invicro Collaborates with Yale's Dr. David Rimm to Expand the Utility of Quanticell for Clinical Pathology Applications - Business Wire

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Prefer Tea Over Coffee? It Could Be Your Genes, Study Finds – CBS Baltimore

Monday, March 9th, 2020

(CNN) Whether youre inclined to choose coffee or green tea for your morning boost could be determined by your genes, a recent study found.

To examine genetic associations with food preferences, researchers from the Riken Center for Integrative Medical Sciences (IMS) and Osaka University in Japan studied the genetic data and food preferences of more than 160,000 people in Japan.

The research, published in the journal Nature Human Behavior, found genetic links for 13 dietary habits including consumption of alcohol, other beverages and foods, and also complex human diseases such as cancer and diabetes.

We know that what we eat defines what we are, but we found that what we are also defines what we eat, said Yukinori Okada, Senior Visiting Scientist at Riken IMS and professor at Osaka University, in a press release.

Genome studies are typically conducted to associate specific genetic variations with particular diseases, according to the National Human Genome Research Institute, part of the US National Institutes of Health.

This involves grouping thousands of people together depending on whether they have a disease and looking at DNA markers called single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, which can be used to predict the presence of that disease. If researchers find a SNP that is repeatedly associated with the disease group, they can assume that people with that genetic variation might be at risk for the disease.

Rather than looking at diseases, the Riken team examined dietary habits to find out if there were any markers that made people at risk for typically eating certain foods.

The researchers used data of more than 160,000 Japanese people from the BioBank Japan Project, launched in 2003 with a goal to provide evidence for the implementation of personalized medicine. The project collects DNA and clinical information, including items related to participants lifestyles such as dietary habits, which were recorded through interviews and questionnaires.

They found nine genetic locations that were associated with consuming coffee, tea, alcohol, yogurt, cheese, natto (fermented soybeans), tofu, fish, vegetables and meat.

Variants responsible for the ability to taste bitter flavors were also observed. This association was found among people who liked to eat tofu; while those without the variant consumed less alcohol or none at all.

Those who ate more fish, natto, tofu and vegetables had a genetic variant that made them more sensitive to umami tastes, best described as savory or meaty flavors.

The main ingredients of the foods mattered, too for example, there were positive genetic correlations between eating yogurt and eating cheese, both milk-based foods.

In order to find whether any of these genetic markers associated with food were also linked with disease, the researchers conducted a phenome study.

The phenome comprises all the possible observable traits of DNA, known as phenotypes. Six of the genetic markers associated with food were also related to at least one disease phenotype, including several types of cancer as well as type 2 diabetes.

Since the research studied only people native to Japan, the same genetic variations associated with food preferences are likely not applicable to populations across the globe. However, similar links have been discovered in different groups.

A 2014 study presented at the European Journal of Human Genetics meeting in Milan identified a genetic variant that affects preferences for butter or oil on bread. A separate European study from the same year found genetic variants related to the perception of saltiness of a food.

A form of a bitter receptor gene was found, in a 2014 study, to contribute to differences in the enjoyment of coffee: People who perceived stronger bitterness liked coffee more; those with a lower bitterness perception liked coffee less.

The study authored by Okada also didnt measure environmental factors. Our environment, demographics, socioeconomic status and culture such as whether we eat food from work or home; our age; how much money we make; and what our families eat are some of the biggest drivers of our food choices.

These factors would weigh more than the genetics in some cases, said Dr. Jos Ordovs, director of Nutrition and Genomics at Tufts University in Massachusetts, who was not involved in the study.

Given all the findings that genetic differences influence not only responses to foods but preferences as well, experts think considering them can help nutritionists personalize diets to each persons needs and tastes while still hitting nutritional requirements.

Something that sometimes we have felt is that the nutrition field has been focusing too much on nutrients rather than on foods, Ordovs said.

Previous studies have been looking at genes that were associating with higher protein intake or higher fat intake or higher carbohydrate intake, Ordovs said. But this study is more aligned with the fact that people eat foods. They dont just eat proteins, carbohydrates and fats. People tend to eat within a specific pattern.

Further research is needed to explain an exact balance between genetic predisposition and volition when it comes to food choices in different groups of people, but Okada suggests that by estimating individual differences in dietary habits from genetics, especially the risk of being an alcohol drinker, we can help create a healthier society.

The-CNN-Wire & 2020 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved.

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Jane C. Wright: The Woman Who Changed the Landscape of Oncology – Technology Networks

Monday, March 9th, 2020

Dr Jane Cooke Wright whether youve heard of her or not, her research changed the path of oncology, paving the way for cancer treatment as we know it.In a time when medicine and research were predominantly white and male, Jane and her family had challenged the preconceptions of what a scientist should be. Jane and her sister, Barbara, represented the third generation of Wright family medics; the tradition began with their grandfather, who, after being born into slavery, later graduated from Meharry Medical College as valedictorian of his class. Their father, Dr. Louis Tompkins Wright, was one of the first African-American graduates of Harvard Medical School and founded the Harlem Hospital Cancer Research Foundation (HHCRF).

After briefly considering the idea of pursuing an art degree, Wright graduated with honors from New York Medical College and in 1949 began working with her father at the HHCRF.

Chemotherapy wasnt always one of the go-to approaches for cancer treatment. In the early to mid-20th century, using drugs to treat cancer was considered somewhat experimental, only to be used if other treatment avenues had been exhausted. Despite the hesitant attitudes towards chemotherapeutic agents, Wright and her colleagues made many strides towards establishing chemotherapy as a viable treatment for cancer.

One of the most significant came in 1951; Wright led a seminal piece of research that laid the foundations for treating solid tumors chemotherapeutically.1 The study primarily established the efficacy of methotrexate, a folic acid antagonist, in treating breast cancer, which was a major result in itself. However, it also demonstrated the long-term efficacy of combination therapy and adjustment of treatment regimens according to the individual patients symptoms of toxicity. Methotrexate continues to be used to this day, alone or in combination, to treat a range of cancers from head and neck to non-Hodgkins lymphoma.

Adjusting treatment according the individual was an idea forming the basis of much of Wrights research, representing some of the early steps towards personalized medicine. Whilst previous researchers had used mice tumors as a model for predicting response to different chemotherapeutics, Wright and her colleagues cultured tumor tissue taken from patients. Once grown, the primary cultures were treated with a variety of chemotherapeutic agents and their response was assessed. In doing so, Wright helped to develop a method for testing and selecting the most effective course of chemotherapy for a particular tumor in an individual patient.2

The solution came in 1964, in the form of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), of which Wright was a founding member and notably, the only woman of the founding group. In a 2010 interview, Wright explained why the society was created:

Our goals were to bring about a set of standards for a clinical oncology specialty, to enlarge the area of knowledge in the field and to ensure that vital information was readily available and disseminated.3Wright set out to achieve these goals during her tenure as associate dean and professor of surgery at her alma mater, New York Medical College, developing cancer treatment guidelines and a program teaching doctors how to use chemotherapy. Her appointment to the position was also a significant social feat at the time; upon taking office in 1967, Wright became the highest ranked African American woman at a nationally recognized medical institution. This was only one of a number of high-ranking positions held by Wright over the next 20 years.

In a 2011 interview, Wrights daughter, Alison W. Jones, PhD, gave an insight into how her mother achieved so much in a time and society which often had preconceptions of what a womans life should be. She never looked at things as obstacles, Jones explained. She looked at them as challenges and I think that she was a very ambitious person and I think that she never let anything stand in the way of her doing what she wanted to do.

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Jane C. Wright: The Woman Who Changed the Landscape of Oncology - Technology Networks

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