2018 has clearly been a year when significant opportunities intersected with strong partnerships to yield advancements. In particular, the clinical advancements that were realized are a testimony to stakeholders working together to deliver on promises affecting major aspects of precision medicine. These include improving how healthcare is executed, how innovation is helping physicians better diagnose and treat patients, and how drug discovery is being conducted to deliver more efficient translational success.
Be it through AI/machine learning, blockchain technology, CRISPR-Cas9, liquid biopsy, NGS, or cancer immunotherapy, the emerging opportunities and early resulting applications are tremendous, we have:
- established rare disease diagnosis
- expedited newborn sick children screening
- launched large scale population studies
- transitioned DNA sequencing to become routine clinical care
- translated immunotherapy discoveries into new therapeutics that, in certain cancer scenarios, are already becoming the new standard of care
- and on the regulatory side, the FDA has finalized guidance to accelerate the development of reliable,beneficial NGS-based tests
Quick Note: Access Discounted Jan. 20-23 Tickets Here by 12/31 – and visit all the facets of Precision Medicine. The overarching result is that , and this is raising our expectations for even more highly impactful developments in 2019.precision medicine is now part of the common vocabulary in healthcare
- Genomic Medicine has reached milestones that, until recently, seemed out of reach: Thermo Fisher Scientific, for example, received FDA approval for the first NGS-based companion Dx (Oncomine DX Target Test); 23andMe achieved the go-ahead to offer a health product DNA-test; AstraZeneca’s PARP inhibitor Lynparza was approved for advanced ovarian cancer and metastatic breast cancer; Stanford researches eliminated all traces of cancer, including distant metastasis, by activating T-cells in mice using a cancer vaccine; the Genetic Counseling Medicare bill was introduced.
- Scientists behind game-changing cancer immunotherapies won Nobel Prize in Medicine. The work of the winners, American James Allison (PMWC Award Honoree) and Japanese Tasuku Honjo led to the creation of a multibillion-dollar market for new cancer medicines.
- AI/Machine Learning continues to change healthcare. The FDA approved in April the first AI-powered diagnostic device to detect certain diabetes-related eye problems that don’t need a doctor’s help.
- Innovative Care Models are new catalysts to transforming healthcare.Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway and JP Morgan Chase are teaming up to form an independent healthcare company for their employees. CVS and Aetna are merging, while Walgreens and LabCorp are partnering.
- Major acquisitions occurred: Flatiron Health and Foundation Medicine were both acquired by Roche, Genohm and ACEA Biosciences by Agilent, Counsyl by Myriad, and Illumina is in the process of acquiring Pacific Biosciences. All will certainly impact the path to a more established approach of expedited, accurate clinical testing and decision-making.
- Population studies have gotten bigger: The “Genomics England” initiative reached 100K participants, the “All of Us Research Program” launched, and is inviting all Americans to join its program, the NHS will start screening all cancer patients for mutations, and Finland’s “FinnGen” project aims to match genome information with over 500K blood samples, just to name a few.
- Other newsworthy events of this year: 23andMe is sharing its 5 million client’s genetic data with drug giant GSK, Oxford Nanopore Technologies mapped the most complete human genome using its MinIon device, and some fed-up hospitals are creating a non-profit generic drug company, Civica Rx, to get some control over the drug supply for patients.
Hear from nearly every one of these organizations at the Precision Medicine World Conference (PMWC), January 20-23rd – See the topics that are at the forefront & who is leading the discussions – PROGRAM.
These developments, while exciting, come with their own consequences and will undoubtedly impact how genomics studies are conducted, how doctors and patients are educated, and will highlight an even bigger need for clarification through regulatory guidelines, and for changes in reimbursement policies.
Be among the first to hear where the field is moving, what will look like, and how it will . PMWC, January 20-23 has secured a great lineup of 400 speakers and representatives from CMS (Seema Verma), UPenn (Carl June), MIT/Broad Institute (Feng Zhang), Illumina (Francis de Souza), Regeneron (George Yancopoulos), NIH (Eric Dishman), UCSF, Stanford, Google AI, Myriad, Pacific Biosciences, GSK, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Roche, and many more.the next phaseimpact you and your business or career.
The Precision Medicine World Conference (PMWC), in its 17th installment, will take place in the Santa Clara Convention Center (Silicon Valley) on January 21-24, 2020. The program will traverse innovative technologies, thriving initiatives, and clinical case studies that enable the translation of precision medicine into direct improvements in health care. Conference attendees will have an opportunity to learn first-hand about the latest developments and advancements in precision medicine and cutting-edge new strategies and solutions that are changing how patients are treated.
See 2019 Agenda highlights:
- Five tracks will showcase sessions on the latest advancements in precision medicine which include, but are not limited to:
- AI & Data Science Showcase
- Clinical & Research Tools Showcase
- Clinical Dx Showcase
- Creating Clinical Value with Liquid Biopsy ctDNA, etc.
- Digital Health/Health and Wellness
- Digital Phenotyping
- Diversity in Precision Medicine
- Drug Development (PPPs)
- Early Days of Life Sequencing
- Emerging Technologies in PM
- Emerging Therapeutic Showcase
- FDA Efforts to Accelerate PM
- Gene Editing
- Genomic Profiling Showcase
- Immunotherapy Sessions & Showcase
- Implementation into Health Care Delivery
- Large Scale Bio-data Resources to Support Drug Development (PPPs)
- Microbial Profiling Showcase
- Microbiome
- Neoantigens
- Next-Gen. Workforce of PM
- Non-Clinical Services Showcase
- Pharmacogenomics
- Point-of Care Dx Platform
- Precision Public Health
- Rare Disease Diagnosis
- Resilience
- Robust Clinical Decision Support Tools
- Wellness and Aging Showcase
See 2019 Agenda highlights:
- Five tracks will showcase sessions on the latest advancements in precision medicine which include, but are not limited to:
- AI & Data Science Showcase
- Clinical & Research Tools Showcase
- Clinical Dx Showcase
- Creating Clinical Value with Liquid Biopsy ctDNA, etc.
- Digital Health/Health and Wellness
- Digital Phenotyping
- Diversity in Precision Medicine
- Drug Development (PPPs)
- Early Days of Life Sequencing
- Emerging Technologies in PM
- Emerging Therapeutic Showcase
- FDA Efforts to Accelerate PM
- Gene Editing / CRISPR
- Genomic Profiling Showcase
- Immunotherapy Sessions & Showcase
- Implementation into Health Care Delivery
- Large Scale Bio-data Resources to Support Drug Development (PPPs)
- Microbial Profiling Showcase
- Microbiome
- Neoantigens
- Next-Gen. Workforce of PM
- Non-Clinical Services Showcase
- Pharmacogenomics
- Point-of Care Dx Platform
- Precision Public Health
- Rare Disease Diagnosis
- Resilience
- Robust Clinical Decision Support Tools
- Wellness and Aging Showcase
- A lineup of 450+ highly regarded speakers featuring pioneering researchers and authorities across the healthcare and biotechnology sectors
- Luminary and Pioneer Awards, honoring individuals who contributed, and continue to contribute, to the field of Precision Medicine
- 2000+ multidisciplinary attendees, from across the entire spectrum of healthcare, representing different types of companies, technologies, and medical centers with leadership roles in precision medicine