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Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine Hannes Smarason Genome Sequencing |Personalized Medicine | Transforming Health Care

Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

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Four factors are helping to advance the use of genomic data to provide faster, more accurate, more in-depth information for personalized patient care.

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Page 1: Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

Hannes Smarason

Genome Sequencing |Personalized Medicine | Transforming Health Care

Page 2: Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

We’ve come a long way in improving the way that a patient’s genome sequence data is analyzed and interpreted to realize the full potential of personalized medicine.

Page 3: Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

Here are four factors helping to overcome barriers and achieve new milestones for using genomic data to provide faster, more accurate, and more in-depth information to guide clinicians in delivering personalized care for patients.

Page 4: Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

Factor #1: Fast database query of the genomeProblem: Relational database architectures make it possible to store large quantities of sequencing data, but querying whole genome data can be time-consuming and take days to weeks.

Solution: The GOR (Genomic Ordered Relations) database is able to query whole-genome sequences in real time. The reason is that GOR understands the genome in terms of chromosomes, its natural structure, rather than as a continuous string of sequence. When searching for a variant, tools in the GOR architecture don’t have to scan each individual’s entire sequence; they retrieve the variant straight from its location. The GOR database was pioneered a decade ago by deCODE genetics, one of the first organizations to manage truly large genetic datasets, and is now being used by NextCODE for clinical applications of genomic data.

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Factor #2: Fast, reliable identification of gene variantsProblem: Many sequencing analysis pipelines are only powered to process data in a compressed format called Variant Call Format (VCF) files. These comprise only a tiny fraction of the genome, and being working only with VCF files makes it difficult to correct common alignment and allele-calling errors. That can result in both false positive and negative results, or missing the key variants altogether.

Solution: The foundation for improved sensitivity and specificity is the ability to use VCF data on top of the raw sequence data from which it was derived. NextCODE’s pipeline and clinical interfaces, powered by GOR, give users the ability to visualize raw sequence data at a click. This approach enables genomic analysis and interpretation by seeking out disease-causing genetic variants, either in specific patients, or for research studies in a clinical setting.

Page 6: Four Factors for Improving Genomic Data for Personalized Medicine

Factor #3: Clinician access to patient genomic informationProblem: Many of today’s genomic interpretation tools are too complex and difficult to use by clinicians who may have minimal experience with genetic informatics tools.

Solution: All of the complex informatics required by a clinical analysis tool should disappear at the fingertips of a clinician. It starts by having a robust foundation to the informatics platform, and using the GOR database architecture enables rapid cycling between personal sequence data and broad clinical knowledge. The result is the Clinical Sequence Analyzer (CSA) in which clinicians can simply type in a patient’s symptoms, and CSA will search the patient’s whole genome for variants that may be relevant.

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Factor #4: Applying the full power of WGS to tumor analysisProblem: Many of today’s approaches to the cancer genome analysis only look at the immediate next step for a course of treatment – an important capability, but only part of a holistic view of the genetic profile of a patient’s cancer and what can be done to fight it.

Solution: The Tumor Mutation Analyzer makes a more holistic approach possible, analyzing a whole exome or whole genome sequence from a patient’s own genome and from tumor cells. The distinguishing feature of TMA is the depth of the data it stores and the unprecedented level of detail it provides to more accurately identify variations. This level of detail is especially important in cancer genetics, where the chances of finding previously unknown variants are very high. Even if a mutation is successfully targeted with a course of treatment, another potential driver is often waiting in the wings.

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The pace of progress has been astounding with advances in the use of genomic information for patient care. How will the path continue in the future? Stay tuned.