Precision Medicine News

Genome Analytics Could Boost Precision Medicine for Kidney Cancer

Researchers are using a comprehensive genome analytics tool to develop precision medicine treatments for patients with kidney cancer.

Genome analytics could boost precision medicine for kidney cancer

Source: Thinkstock

By Jessica Kent

- Scientists at City of Hope and the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) are accelerating precision medicine and personalized treatments for kidney cancer using an advanced genome analytics tool.

Nearly 74,000 new cases of kidney cancer will be diagnosed this year, and about 14,800 people will die from the disease, researchers noted. Experts know that patients who have certain genetic mutations are more susceptible to specific drugs, but most doctors are not genetically sequencing each kidney cancer patient’s tumors.

"It's a paradox: We don't use targeted therapy in a targeted fashion," said Sumanta Pal, MD, one of the study's senior authors and co-director of the Kidney Cancer Program at City of Hope. "At City of Hope, we have begun to provide comprehensive genome and exome sequencing for all patients with Stage 4 cancer, regardless of their cancer site."