For Four Days, San Francisco’s Japan Town Was the Center of Genomics | all4bioinformatics
Breaking News
Loading...

Friday, 12 July 2013

For Four Days, San Francisco’s Japan Town Was the Center of Genomics

Japan Town_vPNG



This post is published by:by 

At the end of June I was fortunate enough to attend the second annual Clinical Genome conference, a meeting hosted by Cambridge Healthtech Institute. The conference was divided into two sections: “The Science of Investigation and Interpretation” (all about science) and “The Business of Integration and Implementation” (all about business and regulatory aspects). Kudos to the organizers for selecting a great set of speakers and a terrific location, smack in the middle of Japan Town in San Francisco, surrounded by good restaurants and a nice coffee shop right across the street. I want to share with you some of the highlights from the science section of the conference.
Let me start out with some interesting quotes I heard over the course of the first two days while attending the science section:
  • B. Korf: Genome is the library of life, and not the book of life – we can read the words, but we do not understand them.
  • B. Korf: It is a HIPAA violation to look up your own medical record.
  • B. Korf: What about an iTunes of medical records? Similar issue for medical genomics data to what was an issue before for music.
  • H. Rehm: 66% (or 81% of variants for hearing loss) of variants identified were only found in one disease case.
  • H. Rehm: Problem of individual variants being double counted. Individual patients need to be barcoded so that they are not shown multiple times in multiple studies. Possibly add a patient barcode that can be added to each study.
  • R. Scott: The gene in biology is what the atom is in chemistry.
  • R. Scott: Decreasing genetic testing cost will increase clinical and personal utility.
  • M. Kircher: It cannot all be black and white; when it comes to genomics sequence data we have to accept uncertainties.
  • G. Lyon: “Proprietary databases” are like “walled gardens” – we need to get into this pre-competitive space and share data with each other!
  • G. Lyon: Two years ago it was OK to do anecdotes – now it is better to get together for a systematic approach (sequence millions and get better variant calling methodologies).
  • G. Lyon: With exome sequencing you would only look where the light is.
The conference was kicked off by Kevin Davies (founding editor-in-chief of Bio-IT World and now VP of Business Development & Publisher at C&EN at the American Chemical Society). Kevin started out with a nice anecdotal story highlighting the 10th anniversary of the declaration of the genome showing a slide of the Leicester scientist group that printed an entire whole genome in 130 books to demonstrate just how much information is in it – the printing of which costs nowadays a lot more than actually sequencing it (currently at ~$5,000)!

google+

linkedin

About Author
  • Donec sed odio dui. Duis mollis, est non commodo luctus, nisi erat porttitor ligula, eget lacinia odio sem nec elit. Sed posuere consecteturDonec sed odio dui. Duis mollis, est non commodo luctus, nisi erat porttitor ligula, eget lacinia odio sem nec elit. Read More

    0 comments:

    POST A COMMENT

     

    Gallery

    About

    About Us