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MRC, NIHR to develop Phenome Centre in the UK

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Medical Research Council (MRC) and the Department of Health’s National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) will develop a Phenome Centre, which will use the cutting edge facilities developed for London 2012 to help develop better and more targeted treatment for patients. With an investment of five million pounds over a five-year period each from MRC and NIHR, the centre will be build with expertise from London 2012 Olympic’s anti-doping facilities provided by GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and operated by King’s College London.

The MRC-NIHR Phenome Centre will enable the UK to make its world-class phenotyping technology and expertise available to both researchers and the life sciences industry to accelerate the translation of medical discoveries into better healthcare.

The new centre will be led by a collaboration of academic partners, led by Imperial College London, and the suppliers of nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry equipment (Bruker and Waters Corporation).

Researchers at the Centre will investigate the phenome patterns of patients and volunteers by analysing samples – usually blood or urine – very rapidly and on an unprecedented scale. This will help them to discover new ‘biomarkers’ to explain why one individual or population may be more susceptible to a disease than another. This knowledge will aid scientists in finding new, safer and more targeted treatments. Phenome analysis has already been used to ‘tailor’ cancer treatment to suit individual patients by, for example, minimising the toxicity and maximising the efficiency of drug treatments for colon cancer.

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) is the official laboratory services provider for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympics Games. Through a groundbreaking partnership with King’s College London, GSK is providing the facilities and equipment to enable expert analysts from King’s to independently operate a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accredited laboratory during the London 2012 Games. The laboratory in Harlow will see more tests carried out than at any other Games, with every medallist who steps on the podium and up to 50 per cent of all athletes being tested.

Dr Rohit Khanna, Vice President of Worldwide Marketing, Waters Corporation said, “Waters is proud to be part of this first-of-a-kind research centre and the opportunity to work with such distinguished partners in support of our mission: to develop technology that allows science to provide answers to the critical challenges we face. This centre is a significant advancement for the science of phenome-typing, enabled by a powerful partnership of leading academic institutions, government and companies like ours providing the latest innovations. We fully expect this centre will multiply our understanding of disease and help us to improve the health of populations around the world.”

EP News Bureau

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