Quest Diagnostics Leads Personalized Medicine Developments
Public support for personalized and precision medicine (PM) is running ahead of the health care industry’s plans to develop and implement PMbased clinical strategies. At least that is the conventional thinking, supported by two recent studies. (See "Public Ahead of Providers in Support of Personalized Medicine," Diagnostic Testing & Emerging Technologies, Oct. 26, 2016, for details on the study findings.) But based on the deals we are seeing, the theory that the industry is dragging its feet on PM simply does not hold up—at least within the diagnostics realm. And it is not just startups and research institutions. Now the giant labs are stepping up and launching actionable PM clinical solutions. Quest Diagnostics has been among the most active on this front. Last month, Quest made national headlines by partnering with IBM Watson Health to launch a new precision medicine service combining genomic tumor sequencing with cognitive computing. (See Diagnostic Testing & Emerging Technologies, May 11, 2015, for more about IBM’s Watson and genomic analysis for cancer care.) On Nov. 21, Quest announced another PM blockbuster: QuestDirect, a pilot service in Colorado and Missouri that allows patients to order certain lab tests without a physician’s order by downloading a special […]
Public support for personalized and precision medicine (PM) is running ahead of the health care industry's plans to develop and implement PMbased clinical strategies. At least that is the conventional thinking, supported by two recent studies. (See "Public Ahead of Providers in Support of Personalized Medicine," Diagnostic Testing & Emerging Technologies, Oct. 26, 2016, for details on the study findings.) But based on the deals we are seeing, the theory that the industry is dragging its feet on PM simply does not hold up—at least within the diagnostics realm.
And it is not just startups and research institutions. Now the giant labs are stepping up and launching actionable PM clinical solutions. Quest Diagnostics has been among the most active on this front. Last month, Quest made national headlines by partnering with IBM Watson Health to launch a new precision medicine service combining genomic tumor sequencing with cognitive computing. (See Diagnostic Testing & Emerging Technologies, May 11, 2015, for more about IBM's Watson and genomic analysis for cancer care.)
On Nov. 21, Quest announced another PM blockbuster: QuestDirect, a pilot service in Colorado and Missouri that allows patients to order certain lab tests without a physician's order by downloading a special order form posted on the company's website. "In today's consumer-driven health care environment, people want to play a more active role in managing their own health and wellness," Quest CEO Steve Rusckowski explained in a statement.
Although the Quest deals command the attention, the real impetus for development of PM solutions that consumers can use now, either directly or via their physician, is coming from the growing volume of smaller deals that fly under the radar. Here are just a few of the notable recent PM deals.
Notable Personalized/Precision Medicine Deals from November
|
Takeaway: The popular perception that personalized medicine is more of a consumer attitude than a clinical reality is being belied—at least within the diagnostics realm—not just by lab giants like Quest but the literally dozens of smaller genomic deals.
Subscribe to Clinical Diagnostics Insider to view
Start a Free Trial for immediate access to this article