Q: How did you become interested in the clinical interpretation of next-generation sequencing data?

 

A: During my residency in Clinical Pathology, the power of next-generation DNA sequencing was readily apparent to me. Just as obvious was the limitation of fully utilizing the technology at a large scale due to challenges in efficiently and accurately analyzing these data for clinical purposes. Genomenon – from a Greek word meaning “born out of need” – began as my reaction to a lack of commercially available tools to help facilitate genomic analysis. My research in interpreting the genomes of hematopoietic malignancies to uncover their genetic cause was a perfect testing environment for some of the data-mining and organization techniques being used by Mastermind.

Q: What was your experience as a molecular pathologist at the University of Michigan when you had to search for disease, gene and variant relationships?

 

A: Two-fold. In many circumstances, the variant was well-known as a pathogenic variant but more detailed information was needed to address the specific clinical circumstance of the individual patient – things like identifying the most appropriate therapy for a variant in a particular disease context or determining whether the given variant had ever been seen in a specific clinical context. In a second case, when the variant was an unusual or otherwise less well-characterized variant, simply determining whether the variant had ever been published before, and if so where, how many times, in what disease contexts and with what clinical annotations, were the primary questions that needed to be addressed. In both circumstances, this discovery process relied heavily on information in the primary literature and invariably the process of manually finding and organizing the evidence was much more time-consuming and idiosyncratic than actually interpreting the results. I recognized that each time I consulted the literature, the same types of questions were asked. The inspiration behind founding Genomenon was when I recognized that much of this work could be automated and a comprehensive set of questions could be asked and answered up-front and at a massive scale.

Q: What are the challenges facing clinical interpretation of NGS data today?

 

A: Reproducibility of interpretation is the biggest challenge we face as clinicians. There are guidelines that are emerging to help compel order and regularity to the process but this is only effective when everyone is working with the same set of evidence. Efforts to organize a comprehensive dataset of clinically meaningful information for each individual variant face the challenge of doing this work at the massive scale demanded by the complexity and quantity of the data. These are the challenges that the Mastermind Genomic Search Engine, Genomenon’s first product, is addressing. It does this by collecting, organizing and presenting information at the variant level through a comprehensive data aggregation process predicated on the primary evidence in the medical literature.

Q: What are the benefits of Genomenon’s new evidence-based blood cancer panel?

 

A: One of the interesting facets of using NGS technology in Molecular Diagnostics is the ability to sequence many more genes on a single assay than was previously possible. This has lead to the promulgation of many dozens of disease-focused and more comprehensive diagnostic gene panels with a large number of biomarkers. One unforeseen challenge that arises as a result is the heterogeneity of each of these panels that are purporting to test for variants in the same disease or diseases. Using the data in Mastermind, we were able to automatically develop the first ever evidence-based list of candidate biomarkers for a disease category – hematopoietic malignancy. We published this cancer panel with all the evidence to demonstrate how biomarkers can be automatically identified at scale based on the evidence found in the scientific literature. This way, the inclusion or exclusion of a biomarker – whether a gene or a variant – can be predicated on the evidence supporting the usefulness of the gene or variant from the primary data, eliminating the subjectivity and inefficiency of a previously laborious and manual process.

Q: Can you give an example of how Genomenon’s Mastermind knowledge-base can improve cancer patient outcomes?

 

A: There are two ways Mastermind improves patient outcomes – both individual and collectively. For the individual, providing immediate and well-organized access to information in the medical literature will streamline the efficiency of the manual variant curation process. This is useful in bolstering more wide-spread use of defined guidelines for variant interpretation and promoting increased reproducibility of interpretations across institutions and molecular diagnosticians. In terms of improving patient outcomes collectively, having the comprehensive data made available to researchers allows for deeper and more immediate insight into the landscape of disease-gene and disease-gene-variant relationships that are otherwise difficult to see when examining individual studies or individual disease-relationships. Mastermind is being used in research to highlight these affinities and allow cancer researchers to ask questions more globally than previously possible.

Q: What are the complex challenges that the field of diagnostic genomics will face in the next five years?

 

A: With the ability to sequence more and more individuals in a greater variety of clinical scenarios, we are poised to controvert some long-held beliefs about genetic variation and the development of disease. These new discoveries will begin to challenge current diagnostic, and treatment paradigms. As an example, the discovery of a number of presumptive pathogenic variants discovered at a low-level in disease-free individuals will make much earlier interventions possible but it will also require clinicians to make a determination of which patients will in fact go on to develop disease and which may require enhanced surveillance.

Q: What advice can you give to young scientists considering an academic research career?

 

A: Keep an open mind. During your academic training, there will be the tendency to only see your successes measured by your publication record. In my case, I had successful outcomes from both my graduate training and post-doctoral work. During the course of the latter, I recognized that there were ways to advance a field from outside of academia that had the potential to make bigger and faster change than would typically be afforded from a conventional professorship. I recognized the benefit of effectuating change outside of academia in the private sector. Acceleration of the initial Human Genome Sequencing Project at the hands of Craig Venter and Celera proved that genome sequencing was possible at a much faster pace. This was followed by dramatic advances in efficiency and cost-effectiveness of DNA sequencing at scale afforded by technical revolutions in private companies such as Roche and Illumina which proved that genome sequencing was plausible. Our goal at Genomenon is to make genome sequencing practical by eliminating the final barrier to wide-spread adoption – accurate, efficient and reproducible genome interpretation.

Interview with Gabriel Bien-Willner of Palmetto GBA

Q: What does your role entail as the director of the MolDX program at Palmetto GBA?

A: The job directing MolDX is multifaceted; first and foremost the MolDX program is responsible for assessing molecular diagnostic tests on the market and makes coverage and pricing determinations for such tests and technology. This is usually done through local coverage determination policies or technical assessments.

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Interview with Peter Marks of FDA

Q: The CBER’s Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy Designation program has been very successful, with about 100 requests for designation in the two years of its existence. Can you please tell us about the program and how it was put together?

A: The Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) Designation program came into being as part of the 21st Century Cures Act that was signed into law on December 13, 2016.

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Interview with Calum MacRae of Harvard Medical School

Q: What patient data do we need to better understand the underlying cause of disease and how to prevent it?

A: Medicine at present is highly underdetermined and data poor. To be precise, one must be comprehensive, so medicine (with our consent) will use not only what we currently conceive of as biomedical information, but also data from across our lives.

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Headlines from PMWC 2019 Silicon Valley

A big ‘Thank You’ to all of our presenters and attendees for celebrating 10 years of precision medicine progress with us! PMWC 2019 Silicon Valley was attended by 2000 participants from 35 countries, which included over 400 speakers in 5 parallel tracks!

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Interview with Ken Bloom of Ambry Genetics

Q: Tell us more about your organization/company. What patient population are you serving and which services are you specializing in?

A: Ambry Genetics is a recognized leader in high quality complex genetic testing. We seek to find the genomic cause or contributors to rare diseases, abnormal phenotypes and hereditary disorders.

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Interview with Lee Pierce of Sirius Computer Solutions

Q: What is the state of big data and analytics in healthcare, and how to best use the reams of data available?

A: More than ever, Healthcare organizations are achieving measurable value through use of their data and analytics assets. There is more raw material available than ever to create value. This raw material is the data flowing from internal systems and applications and also from devices and systems external to healthcare organizations.

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Interview with Anita Nelsen of PAREXEL

Q: There are various new, emerging technologies that bring us closer towards a cure for life-threatening disorders such as cancer, HIV, or Huntington’s disease. Prominent examples include the popular gene editing tool CRISPR or new and improved cell and gene therapies. By when can we expect these new technologies being part of routine clinical care?

A: Today’s emerging technologies are making the promise of individualized treatment a reality.

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Interview with Ilan Kirsch of Adaptive Biotechnologies

Q: The Nobel Prize in Medicine was awarded recently to James Allison and Tasuku Honjo for their work on unleashing the body’s immune system to attack cancer, a breakthrough that has led to an entirely new class of drugs and brought lasting remissions to many patients who had run out of options. The Nobel committee hailed their accomplishments as establishing “an entirely new principle for cancer therapy.” What is your first-hand experience the impact that those new drugs had on patients?

A: For decades cancer was viewed as solely a cell-autonomous condition.

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BMS buys Celgene | Lilly buys Loxo Oncology – Does this Signal a Return to Strong Deal-Making Activities in 2019?

Bristol-Myers Squibb’s blockbuster $74B deal to buy Celgene creates an oncology powerhouse amid industrywide excitement about the rapidly evolving science and explosive growth of the sector. The agreement could signal a return to deal-making for the pharmaceutical industry in the $133B global oncology therapeutics market.

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Interview with Gini Deshpande of NuMedii

Q: What need is NuMedii addressing?

A: NuMedii, has been pioneering the use of Big Data, artificial intelligence (AI) and systems biology since 2010 to accelerate the discovery of precision therapies to address high unmet medical needs. Artificial Intelligence approaches are a natural fit to harness Big Data as they provide a framework to ‘train’ computers to recognize patterns and sift through vast amounts of new and existing genomic

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Interview with Minnie Sarwal of UCSF

Q: Genomic medicine is entering more hospitals and bringing with it non-invasive technology that can be used to better target and treat diseases. What are some key milestones that contributed to this trend?

A: Completion of complete sequence data from the human genome project, and the advances in proteomic, microRNA and epigenetic assays added a layer of pathway biology to the understanding of human diseases.

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Interview with Shidong Jia of Predicine

Q: Once sequencing has been validated as a clinical solution via trusted workflows, and coinciding with the technological developments driving costs lower, we can expect accelerated human genome profiling for clinical Dx. How soon, do you think, will we see accelerated growth and what can we expect?

A: We will see accelerated human genome profiling for clinical Dx in 2019 and the coming years as more biomarker-based cancer drugs are gaining approval.

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Interview with Iya Khalil of GNS Healthcare

Q: Artificial intelligence (AI) techniques have sent vast waves across healthcare, even fueling an active discussion of whether AI doctors will eventually replace human physicians in the future. Do you believe that human physicians will be replaced by machines in the foreseeable future? What are your thoughts?

A: I think that there’s a lot of speculation and uncertainty around AI, but I don’t foresee a time when we won’t need physicians.

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Interview with Ilya Michael Rachman of Immix Biopharma Inc.

Q: The Nobel Price in Medicine was awarded recently to James Allison and Tasuku for their work on unleashing the body’s immune system to attack cancer, a breakthrough that has led to an entirely new class of drugs and brought lasting remissions to many patients who had run out of options. The Nobel committee hailed their accomplishments as establishing “an entirely new principle for cancer therapy.” Besides CAR T-cell therapy what do you think next generation immunotherapies will look like to successfully combat cancer?

A: The next generation of immunotherapies will build on the insights discovered by immunologists like James Allison and Tasuku Honjo and extend them to modify the body’s response to tumors.

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Join me to Kick off PMWC Silicon Valley in the Santa Clara Convention Center, Focusing on Every Element of Precision Medicine

My team worked in collaboration with Bill Dalton, Kim Blackwell, Atul Butte / India Hook Barnard, Nancy Davidson and Sharon Terry to create a program that touches every component of precision medicine while bringing together all of its key stakeholders. Leading participating institutions including Stanford Health Care, UCSF, Duke Health, Duke University, John Hopkins University, University of Michigan and more will share their learnings and experiences and their successes and challenges, as they make precision medicine the new standard of care for all.

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Johns Hopkins
University Of Michigan

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
  • 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
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