I remember going to the doctors with a symptom – rather than having the trigger looked at, I was provided with a general course of antibiotics. It didn’t work, I went back and was given something else to try. I am sure that we can all relate to this scenario. Now bring in the trend of the future: personalized medicines. Gone will be the days of trial and error to see if a particular course of medicine works, the choice of treatment looks set to be much more accurate.
The concept is quite simple, you can take the genome of a person and essentially create a medicine which will target the problem specifically. Think of it in a different way. Two people have the same symptoms, but the cause may be slightly different, so they will need slightly different medicines to help make them better. This is the basis of pharmacogenetics.
It is true when they say that prevention is better than cure. Not only can personalized medicines help with providing a unique and tailored solution to a complaint, they can be used to predict a patient’s likelihood of developing certain illnesses, allowing preventative measures to be put into action before symptoms even develop. Apart from increasing the rates of survival, this will bring much needed financial relief to health services across the world by targeting disease and genetic disorders before needing to spend money on resolving the issues they pose. We are hopeful that developing techniques for mapping the human genome will pave the way for the pharmaceutical development of more precise drug advancement and administration.
The foundation of personalized medicines is, of course, mapping the human genome efficiently, cheaply and correctly. From this there are likely to be a number of beneficiaries of this advanced technology: the patient, society in general and the pharmaceutical industry.
We are sure that it will. The field of diagnostics is ever growing and as such having a constant ultrapure water supply is essential. Clinical analyzers need to receive a constant and reliable supply of compliant water to produce and reproduce diagnostic tests accurately. Water quality below accepted standards affects result accuracy and significantly impacts running costs.