Mission Health Takes National Leadership Role in Personalized Medicine – Mountain Xpress (blog)

From Mission Health:

Mission Healths Personalized Medicine program focuses on response to drugs in a way that will increase the likelihood that a drug will work effectively while decreasing the likelihood that it will result in a bad side effect for our patients. Personalized medicine testing utilizes the genetic make-up of the individual, or in cancer, the genetic makeup of the patients tumor to predict which drug might be the best match for an individual patient. Mission Health is one of the few community health systems in the nation to offer this vital program for both cancer patients and non-cancer patients.

Important initiatives that are fueling the study and practice of personalized medicine at Mission Health are the 2013 recruitment of nationally known personalized medicine expert Lynn Dressler, PhD to develop and direct the Mission Personalized Medicine Program, the opening of Missions Personalized Medicine Clinic in the Fullerton Genetics Center and a grant from the North Carolina Biotechnology Center (NCBC) to help bring this testing to primary care providers in western North Carolina (the grant helps cover the cost of testing). The NCBC is a private nonprofit organization devoted to building long-term societal and economic benefits to North Carolina by supporting biotechnology research, business, and education across the state.

The NCBC funded pilot study focuses on how testing for drug response can be used effectively in a primary care setting. The pilot study evaluates the barriers that might prevent primary care practices from adopting this testing and how those barriers could be addressed, including opportunities for economic development and job growth. The Mission Personalized Medicine team provides education and training for providers to use and interpret test results.

Dr. Dresslers interest in pursuing solutions to obstacles that currently exist for primary care practices to adopt personalized medicine testing for drug response is the opportunity to enhance care and reduce costs with minimal disruption to the primary care practice current work flow. Patients can only benefit if their providers adopt testing, says Dressler. This study will provide free testing and free education and training to providers, so at least those main barriers are off the table. By giving clinicians and patients an opportunity to try out this testing within a safe environment, it may identify and address other barriers that we have not yet realized.

One year into the NCBC funded study, Dressler and the PM team has successfully recruited 10 clinicians from four primary care practices and tested 41 patients. Recommendations for changes in medication management were suggested in more than one third of patients. The study has already identified additional barriers to be addressed to make this testing more efficient and available to more patients and providers. Future plans for the study include recruitment of several additional practices, with a goal of recruiting approximately 80 total patients from the region. Mission Health plans to conduct other pilot studies to enhance drug management in areas such as behavioral health and supportive care for cancer patients.

Ronald A. Paulus, M.D., President and CEO of Mission Health, who will be speaking at the 13th Annual Personalized Medicine Conference at Harvard Medical School in November declares that personalized medicine offers extraordinary medical possibilities. If we can harness the power of this transformational biomedical technology successfully and we are already beginning to we can improve outcomes for our patients and increase the effectiveness of our dedicated clinicians skillful and compassionate care. At the same time, this technology empowers our patients to be informed, shared decision-makers with their physicians. It is truly an exciting time, he says.

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Mission Health Takes National Leadership Role in Personalized Medicine - Mountain Xpress (blog)

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