The New York Genome Center and IBM have teamed up to say “hell no” to cancer.
The organisations are creating an open repository of genetic data to accelerate cancer research and scale access to precision medicine using cognitive insights from analytics tool IBM Watson.
Analysing this data alongside the medical community’s growing knowledge about cancer could help accelerate the ability of doctors to deliver personalised treatment to individual patients.
IBM and New York Genome Center are working together to build the capacity to house the contributed data, train Watson’s cognitive computing capabilities for genomic analysis and enable the Center’s member institutions and other research collaborators to sequence and analyse DNA and RNA from patients’ tumours.
The organisations seek to expand this collaboration with funding from additional partners to further the data repository’s growth and adoption.
Robert Darnell, New York Genome Center’s CEO, said: “Our vision is to create a comprehensive cancer data repository that combines whole genome, exome, targeted panel and phenotypic data in an open platform that will empower researchers and clinicians. We believe that iterative analysis of the data and integration with our growing knowledge of cancer will allow doctors to provide better, personalised treatment.”
Whole genome sequencing can play an important role in informing cancer research and treatment. Access to and interpretation of this type of genomic data, however, is currently limited. By combining genetic and clinical information from patients, IBM and New York Genome Center plan to pool resources and talent while also collaborating with a variety of IBM partners and New York Genome Center members, philanthropic partners, and New York State supporters.
John Kelly III, senior VP, Cognitive Solutions and IBM Research., said: “Data is quickly becoming one of the most valuable resources in the fight against cancer. By amassing this contributed data and applying cognitive insights to the challenge of analysing cancer data, we believe we can soon scale access to precision medicine worldwide.”
All contributed data will be maintained in a HIPAA enabled repository, in de-identified form.
The effort was announced as part of President Obama’s Precision Medicine Initiative on Thursday at a White House Summit.
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