Verily,
Vanderbilt named to launch U.S. Precision Medicine pilot
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[February 25, 2016]
(Reuters) - The National Institutes
of Health on Thursday named Verily, formerly Google Life Sciences, as
advisor to Nashville's Vanderbilt University in a pilot program to
launch the Precision Medicine Initiative outlined by President Barack
Obama last year.
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The program aims to enroll 79,000 volunteer participants by the
end of this year to supply personal data that will eventually be
used to improve health and treat disease.
The initiative is designed to maximize results by tracking
individual characteristics, rather than "medicine based on one size
fits all," NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins said on a conference
call with reporters on Wednesday. It will look not only at genetic
factors but also the role of environmental exposures and their
impact on genetic predispositions.
The agency said more than 40 commitments to the project have emerged
from a diverse array of nonprofits, universities, electronic health
record vendors, technology companies, patient advocates and others.
Dr. Collins said the "cohort program" will eventually include one
million or more U.S. volunteers - including a wide spectrum of
diverse participants from all age, economic and racial groups.
The NIH is working with the Health Resources and Services
Administration to partner with community health centers to bring
under-served individuals, families, and communities into the
program.
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It is also working to standardize applications to give individuals
the ability to contribute their data and has established an
institutional review board to monitor the project.
The Vanderbilt/Verily coordinating center is slated to manage the
overall project, including collection of data from a network of
healthcare provider organizations; a "biobank" to store and manage
biological specimens provided by participants; and a participant
technologies center.
(Reporting By Deena Beasley; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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