| Literature DB >> 33918214 |
Alfredo Cesario1, Marika D'Oria1, Francesco Bove2,3, Giuseppe Privitera4,5, Ivo Boškoski6, Daniela Pedicino7, Luca Boldrini8, Carmen Erra9, Claudia Loreti9, Giovanna Liuzzo7, Filippo Crea7, Alessandro Armuzzi4,5, Antonio Gasbarrini4,5, Paolo Calabresi2,3, Luca Padua9, Guido Costamagna6, Massimo Antonelli10, Vincenzo Valentini8, Charles Auffray11, Giovanni Scambia12,13.
Abstract
Personalized Medicine (PM) has shifted the traditional top-down approach to medicine based on the identification of single etiological factors to explain diseases, which was not suitable for explaining complex conditions. The concept of PM assumes several interpretations in the literature, with particular regards to Genetic and Genomic Medicine. Despite the fact that some disease-modifying genes affect disease expression and progression, many complex conditions cannot be understood through only this lens, especially when other lifestyle factors can play a crucial role (such as the environment, emotions, nutrition, etc.). Personalizing clinical phenotyping becomes a challenge when different pathophysiological mechanisms underlie the same manifestation. Brain disorders, cardiovascular and gastroenterological diseases can be paradigmatic examples. Experiences on the field of Fondazione Policlinico Gemelli in Rome (a research hospital recognized by the Italian Ministry of Health as national leader in "Personalized Medicine" and "Innovative Biomedical Technologies") could help understanding which techniques and tools are the most performing to develop potential clinical phenotypes personalization. The connection between practical experiences and scientific literature highlights how this potential can be reached towards Systems Medicine using Artificial Intelligence tools.Entities:
Keywords: P4 medicine; artificial intelligence; cardiology; digestive endoscopy; gastroenterology; machine learning; neurology; neurorehabilitation; personalized medicine; systems medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 33918214 DOI: 10.3390/jpm11040265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426