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2016 Health Connect South Event

Health Connect South

Dan Cerutti

2016 Health Connect South Event

I had the opportunity to sit down with several presenters and attendees at the 2016 Health Connect South event.  On this week’s show I share three segments with

IBM Watson Health,

VP of Population Health and Cognitive Decision Support, Dan Cerutti

Dan Shook, National Park Service–Kittyhawk

Jim Schwoebel, founder of NeuroLex Diagnostics.

More info soon!

Pharmacogenetic Testing

health-connect-south

Pharmacogenetic Testing

This week I connected with Vanderbilt University’s Dr. Dan Roden to learn about pharmacogenetic testing.  This tool provides physicians and other prescribing health professionals with individual-specific data about how a patient’s body will respond to particular medications or types of medication.  For example, a popular drug, Plavix, which is prescribed to reduce risk of an additional cardiac or vascular event from happening after heart attack or stroke.  In 2% of the population, there is a genetic mutation that prevents the enzyme necessary to activate the drug from being produced.

This means those patients will take the pill but it never becomes active in the body, leaving them at risk.  Similarly, another larger group of individuals will metabolize the drug heavily, releasing more of the anticoagulant into the bloodstream than is desired, putting them at serious risk for bleeding/stroke.  A simple pharmacogentic test will readily reveal these patients before they are exposed to the drug.  There is a large amount of high quality data around this medication’s drug-gene story to substantiate adjusting the current guidelines for its administration.

Dr. Roden received his medical degree and training in Internal Medicine from McGill University before residency at Vanderbilt where he trained in Clinical Pharmacology and Cardiology, and has been a faculty member there since.  Throughout his career he has focused on conducting studies of the clinical, genetic, cellular, and molecular basis of arrhythmia susceptibility and variability responses to arrhythmia therapies.

Over the last 10 years, Dr. Roden has led Vanderbilt’s broader efforts in pharmacogenomics discovery and implementation.  He is principal investigator for the Vanderbilt sites of the National Institutes of Health’s Pharmacogenomics Research Network (PGRN) and the National Human Genome Research Institute’s Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network.

He directs the Vanderbilt DNA databank BioVU, a discovery resource that as of spring 2014 included >175,000 samples linked to deidentified electronic medical records.  He is a leader in Vanderbilt’s PREDICT project that since 2010 has been preemptively embedded pharmacogenomic variant data in the electronic medical records of >14,000 Vanderbilt patients; as of April 2013, PREDICT displays information on 5 drug-gene pairs and delivers point of care decision support when a target drug is prescribed to patients with variant genotypes.

Dr. Roden served as Director of the Vanderbilt Arrhythmia Service, director of the Division of Clinical Pharmacology (1992-2004), and in 2006 was named Assistant Vice-Chancellor for Personalized Medicine.  Dr. Roden has received the Leon Goldberg Young Investigator Award and the Rawls Palmer Progress in Science Award from the American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics; the Distinguished Scientist Award and the Douglas Zipes lectureship from the Heart Rhythm Society; and the Distinguished Scientist Award and the Functional Genomics and Translational Biology Medal of Honor from the American Heart Association.

He currently serves on the Science Board of the FDA. He has been elected to membership in the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the Association of American Physicians, and fellowship in the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Special Guest:

Dr. Dan Roden, MD, Professor of Medicine and Pharmacology, Assistant Vice Chancellor for Personalized Medicine, Vanderbilt University Pinterest LOGO  twitter_logo_small  linkedin_small1  youtube-logo1  facebook_logo_small3  flickr (2)  tumblr logo

precision medicine

Better Medication Management and Compliance and Cancer Treatment

medication management

Marc O’Connor, of Curant Health

Better Medication Management and Compliance

Curant Health (Formerly HealthStat Rx) is a national healthcare company utilizing an innovative patient-centric services, medication management and specialty pharmacy program to provide chronic disease expertise and support to improve the therapy experience and quality of life for patients nationwide. Curant Health also provides hospitals, Accountable Care Organizations, concierge medicine practices, benefits managers, self insured employers, health care technology and home healthcare companies support programs to dramatically improve patient outcomes, reduce the health care spend, and decrease hospital readmission rates.

Curant Health was listed #4 on the 2015 INC. 500 for large health care companies. Curant Health also received the 2016 Atlanta Business Chronicle Pacesetters Award and the 2016 ACG Fast 40 Award for the fastest growing companies in Atlanta and the State of Georgia. Curant Health’s proprietary Pharmacy Analytics platform MedPlan was a Grand Finalist for Microsoft’s 2013 Excellence Award for Innovation.

Dune Medical is maker of MarginProbe. Dune Medical develops, manufactures, and commercializes innovative products that improve the effectiveness and outcome of cancer therapy by providing real-time tissue characterization systems to guide surgical and diagnostic decisions.  The company accomplishes this by identifying significant unmet clinical and market needs and investing in core technologies to develop products that improve patient care, build shareholder value, and create an exciting environment for employees.

Dune Medical Devices was founded in 2002 by Dr. Dan Hashimshony to realize the extraordinary medical potential of its proprietary tissue characterization technology.  Offering surgeons and radiologists the real time ability to identify cancerous tissues and react immediately, this technology holds the promise for a broad range of surgical and diagnostic applications.  Dune Medical Devices is a privately held company with offices in the U.S. and Israel.

MarginProbe allows surgeons to be able to, in real-time, determine the effectiveness of their lumpectomy excision of a worrisome breast lesion, regarding the presence or absence of tumor cells within the surgical margin.  The technology helps reduce the occurrence of having to return to surgery after the pathology results come in reflecting the need for additional excision.  Today, as many as 1 in 4 patients must return for more surgery after lumpectomy when this tool is not deployed.

The company has had this tool utilized on over 9000 patients to date and response from clinicians has been overwhelmingly positive.

Special Guests:

Marc O’Connor, COO, Curant Health

 

Lori Chmura, President, Dune Medical Devices

 

 

Tackling Cardiovascular Disease Through Research, R and D

cardiovascular disease

T3 Labs’ Deepal Panchal

health-connect-south

Tackling Cardiovascular Disease Through Research, R and D

Health experts will be addressing top disease states & explore collaborations that will reduce their occurrence at the upcoming Health Connect South 2016 event.  Panelist, Dr. Neal Weintraub of Augusta University talks about obesity, its contribution to cardiovascular disease, and research aimed at tackling this and other risks.  T3 Labs – Translational Testing and Training Laboratories, Inc. Deepal Panchal M.S. explains how they facilitate R&D and training on new healthcare technologies.

More info soon!

Improving Quality of Diagnostic Data

Improving Quality of Diagnostic Data

Dr. Carolyn Compton, a panelist at the upcoming 2016 Health Connect South event September 21, took time out to join me on the show to talk about the need for improving the quality of data we get through diagnostic testing through better control of how specimens are gathered, handled, and stored.

She shared an example of how a specimen, collected knowing it was positive for tumor cells, can be made to return a “Negative” result for cancer if the specimen is not handled properly once it’s been collected.   She will be talking about how many factors can affect the validity and thus, value, of given tests if there exists a wide range of variance across the pre-diagnostic phase of test gathering.

A pathologist by profession, Dr. Comptom is very familiar with how significant the impact can be if diagnostic testing is unreliable due to practices that could be prevented.  Insuring that we are making decisions using the best, highest quality data available, means we need to look for any areas where variability creates what in essence is data artifact.

Arizona State University ranked by US News and World Report as the most innovative university in the
country and is the #1 producer of Fulbright scholars. Mayo Clinic is ranked by US News and World Report
as the best hospital in the US. NBDA is a 501C3 dedicated to collaboratively developing and implementing the cross­cutting standards needed to re­engineer the biomarker development process and increase its success rate, a critical issue and limiting factor for the implementation of precision medicine.

Special Guest:

Dr. Carolyn Compton, MD

Professor Arizona State University and Mayo Clinic

CMO NBDA; CMO CASI