Come along, take your medicine
Finnish researchers are looking at how personalised medicine could help develop effective treatments for serious diseases.
Personalised medicine is a field that holds a lot of promise as a provider of practices and technology that could help develop more effective treatments for serious diseases such as cancer. Personalised medicine involves tailoring treatment according to the genetic profile and molecular makeup of each patient.
The Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland (FIMM) and FiDiPro Professor Jonathan Knowles have been busy setting out plans on how to promote the use of personalised medicine in the treatment of diseases. "Our goal is to put Finland at the international forefront of research in personalised medicine and to promote the wider application of its principles in practical patient care," says Professor and FIMM Director Olli Kallioniemi.
The deployment of personalised medicine in practical patient care will require broad-based cooperation between different actors in society, including patient organisations, physicians, funding agencies, researchers, business companies and authorities. "We're hoping that with new research knowledge and new developments, future patient care would gravitate towards a more individual approach," Kallioniemi says.
Targeted treatment
Personalised medicine is expected to provide solutions as to how different kinds of treatments and medicines can be targeted at the right patients. Targeted drug treatments can ensure better drug efficacy and fewer long-term side effects.
"For example, we need more detailed analysis of different types of cancer if we want to develop safe and effective drug treatments. We also need more knowledge about individual patients to be able to effectively tailor the treatments to match the patients' specific needs," says FiDiPro Professor Knowles. Between 2010 and 2014, Knowles will be working at FIMM with funding from the FiDiPro (Finland Distinguished Professor) programme. FiDiPro is a funding programme jointly launched by the Academy of Finland and Tekes - the Finnish Funding Agency for Technology and Innovation to recruit international top-level researchers to Finland.
Physicians at the Cancer and Haematology Ward of Helsinki University Hospital and researchers at FIMM are currently working on a joint research project applying methods of personalised medicine to find optimal treatments for leukaemia patients. The project involves Professor Kimmo Porkka from Helsinki University Hospital and Professors Olli Kallioniemi and Jonathan Knowles from FIMM.
Source: www.fidipro.fi