Dr. Laura Jelliffe-Pawlowski, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Epidemiology & Biostatistics in the UCSF School of Medicine and is the Director of Precision Health and Discovery with the UCSF California Preterm Birth Initiative. Dr. Jelliffe-Pawlowski and her team work to identify new tools, tests and technologies that can help identify pregnant women and babies at increased risk for preterm birth, complications of prematurity, and associated birth defects and developmental delays. She has a particular focus and interest in work that leverages molecular markers to help predict outcomes and identify in-roads for intervention. Read her full bio.

Interview with Laura Jelliffe-Pawlowski of UCSF

Q: Patient healthcare data aggregation and analysis is seen as both the panacea for tremendous breakthroughs in precision medicine and as one of its biggest challenges. Are both true and how so?

A: In my view, both are absolutely true – patient healthcare data aggregation allows for great breakthroughs and is also challenging from an ethical perspective in terms of privacy and patient choice. Combining information from health records for millions of people gives us insight into disease and disease processes in way that can allow us to predict and share, with some precision, what the disease trajectory might look like for an individual patient. At the same time, patients continue to express great concerns about data privacy. We need to be able to consider both issues simultaneously – our need for large numbers and the need to consider patient choice and control in the sharing of records.

Q: What are the biggest hurdles today in getting people to share their health data?

A: Historical, societal, and medical traditions are often not our friend when we are looking to have people share their health data – especially vulnerable populations who are often at the highest risk for the health outcomes we are studying – for example heart disease, diabetes, poor birth outcomes. A history of exploitation and implicitly and explicitly racist and classist treatment of certain individuals (e.g. Black, poor, and immigrant people) in medical and medical research settings means that many people don’t trust the medical profession and medical research professionals. Until this tradition is addressed in a multi-factorial way I am not sure it is reasonable to even have the expectation that these groups would willingly share their data.

Q: How can they be overcome? What is needed?

A: While we are making some headway in addressing historical traditions in medicine and medical research that have been both dismissive and exploitative (through training around issues like implicit bias) in my view we won’t really start to break down these barriers until we do two key things: 1) we must elevate and partner with other professionals across race/ethnicity and socioeconomic groupings in all clinical and research endeavors (whether focused specifically on disparities or more broadly on health). Only with inclusion of these individuals as partners and leaders can we begin to understand the full picture and bring whole populations into the fold in this journey) ; 2) we must include study participants – including those who share their medical records with us, as partners in our work (inclusion of community advisory boards in all planning processes is a good step along this road but it goes much further – commitment to sharing data with participants is another element of this, including patients and participants in leadership and decision making groups is another – asking participants and the affected populations what THEY think we should do and then DOING IT is another — paying participants for their time is another — the list goes on and on but is really nested in true partnering).

Q: What has worked? Can you provide some examples that demonstrate that patients and healthy people can successfully share their data where everyone benefits?

A: We have a prospective study underway that I think exemplifies good strategies for approaching research with vulnerable populations and how we might engage larger populations in investigations where data sharing is needed in order to advance discovery to interventions to improve health for those most in need and for everyone. The Supporting Our Ladies And Reducing Stress to Prevent Preterm Birth (SOLARS) study in Oakland, California, funded by the UCSF California Preterm Birth Initiative (UCSF PTBi-CA), is investigating the role of stress in the observed disparities in preterm birth (delivery before 37 completed weeks gestation) in Black and Latina women using a community-engaged, community-based approach for enrollment and follow-up with a focus on identifying low-income women. The study focuses initially on discovery with the ultimate goal of uncovering interventions and involves collection of survey data throughout pregnancy on stress, psychological well-being, and health as well as biospecimens and hospital record review and integration. When we had the idea for this study many other clinicians and researchers questioned whether vulnerable women would engage deeply in this work with us and contribute biospecimens across pregnancy but the community advisory board of the UCSF PTBi-CA felt strongly that because the study was led and staffed by women with lived experience and women of color and because it focused specifically on understanding the role of stress and birth outcomes specifically in Black and Latina women within their geography that women would want to participate and would even be excited to do. Our pilot that tested whether this was true was hugely successful – very vulnerable Black and Latina women engaged with the study, stayed in the study, and expressed enjoying participating. We are now working to enroll 500 women in the study and plan to go bigger – increasing the number of women and locations as the study progresses and as more funding is secured. I think this study continues to be successful because women see themselves in the study and the study teams and feel that they are contributing to the health of their communities – this seems to be absolutely key. They are our partners not our study subjects.

Q: We have a long way to go with clinical trials enrolling at 2-3% today and that number falling. What type and level of shift in culture, laws, collection methods, or other areas is going to be needed to accomplish widespread data sharing?

A: I think we may see some increase in enrollment into trials if we work to partner more with communities in the work we do. We likely need to shift our models of how and where we enroll participants starting with the communities that are affected most by whatever it is that is being researched. If it is an intervention or treatment focused on heart disease or cancer – talk to people with heart disease or about what they think – might recruitment in support groups be helpful, do they have connections to other groups in the community that might be supportive or might even allow recruitment in their offices? Shifting how and where we engage and again, partnering, is key in my view. We may have to actually begin to require some level of patient and community engagement in funding proposals and human subjects applications to push engagement and shift how research is done but it seems like true progress might require this and that such partnering would contribute to the generalizability of findings. Once partnering takes hold open sharing of information will likely feel less threatening because individuals are being included in decision making – that is what partnership is – shared engagement, shared benefits.

Q: How can participants be incentivized to share their health data and other data that researchers need to improve prevention and treatment and to develop new therapies and health practices?

A: I think we have to shift this idea of needing to “incentivize” people to share their data to one where we really focus on how we can partner with people to understand better why they may not want to share and also work to include all kinds of people with all kinds of backgrounds in how we approach sharing. I think we need to talk about why and with whom sharing might happen and be open to people having some choice in how this happens and with whom. Sometimes people are okay sharing some kinds of data and not other types or sharing for certain reasons and with certain groups. We also need to be super mindful of who is reaping the benefits of sharing and making sure that those benefits reach those who contributed data – this may be in the form of, for example, making sure we pay people for their time when contributing data or in making sure the gain more information about their own health. An all or none proposition to sharing may lead to our never having data that is truly representative of our populations.

Q: Will there always be certain communities or populations that will not participate in research because of history or privacy issues?

A: Yes, there may always be communities or populations that don’t want to share but we must not make assumptions about who these groups are. We need to engage people and groups as partners and be flexible around what sharing looks like.

Q: What role will personal technology play in scaling health data sharing and collection?

A: I think consideration of personal technology is key to think about broader sharing of data. Of course there is the “sharing” that happens without a person’s knowledge or approval (or via an approval that was buried deep in long, rarely read approval when you downloaded an application on your phone for example) and then there is the sharing that is transparent and truly agreed to. I think shifting from a burying agreements to share and truly transparent sharing can only help in the long-run because it suggests that a person is valued and that their privacy and choice is prioritized.

Q: What do you predict the landscape will look like in 10 years in terms of people sharing their health data? What are the determinants to making your vision a reality?

A: This is a tough one. What I will say is that I hope it looks more like, for example, the 23andMe model where individuals are asked if they want to contribute their genetic data to certain research projects as they arise and if they say yes – great, and if they say no that is okay too. I think this kind of choice-making leads to more “yes” answers because it is clear that people are valued and their wishes and opinions are prioritized. In my opinion greater flexibility in sharing helps at multiple levels – better results, better generalizability and greater trust in the reasons and questions behind what we are asking people to share and how they, their families, and their communities will benefit.

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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!

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More

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.

Read More
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
Get Updates
Sign up for occasional updates on upcoming conferences, news, and other information.
We respect your privacy and will never share your email with anyone.
Something went wrong, please verify your input.
Thank you for signing up!

Get Exclusive Access to the Top PMWC Talks

To receive the most comprehensive news and updates from the field of precision medicine, subscribe to the newsletter here.

Bonus for suscribing, you will get the access code for the top 3 talk videos from January's Precision Medicine World Conference.

You have successfully subscribed, you can access the talks here.