| Literature DB >> 26081768 |
Konstantinos Mitropoulos1, Hayat Al Jaibeji2,3, Diego A Forero4, Paul Laissue5, Ambroise Wonkam6, Catalina Lopez-Correa7, Zahurin Mohamed8, Wasun Chantratita9, Ming Ta Michael Lee10,11, Adrian Llerena12, Angela Brand13, Bassam R Ali14, George P Patrinos15.
Abstract
In recent years, the translation of genomic discoveries into mainstream medical practice and public health has gained momentum, facilitated by the advent of new technologies. However, there are often major discrepancies in the pace of implementation of genomic medicine between developed and developing/resource-limited countries. The main reason does not only lie in the limitation of resources but also in the slow pace of adoption of the new findings and the poor understanding of the potential that this new discipline offers to rationalize medical diagnosis and treatment. Here, we present and critically discuss examples from the successful implementation of genomic medicine in resource-limited countries, focusing on pharmacogenomics, genome informatics, and public health genomics, emphasizing in the latter case genomic education, stakeholder analysis, and economics in pharmacogenomics. These examples can be considered as model cases and be readily replicated for the wide implementation of pharmacogenomics and genomic medicine in other resource-limited environments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26081768 PMCID: PMC4485996 DOI: 10.1186/s40246-015-0033-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genomics ISSN: 1473-9542 Impact factor: 4.639
Fig. 1Encouraging collaboration between developed and developing/resource-limited countries in the field of genomic medicine. While developing countries will benefit from training opportunities, knowledge transfer, and expanding research networks, developed countries are also likely to benefit through comparative work and multicenter projects involving cases with rare diseases or unique clinical features from well-defined populations