Englander Institute for Precision Medicine
News & Events

News & Events

Join our frequent seminar series, case conferences, consortium meetings, and more!

EXaCT-1 Precision Medicine Cancer Test Validated for Clinical Usage

October 3, 2016

A powerful next-generation genome-sequencing test developed at Weill Cornell Medicine can detect mutations that guide precision cancer treatment with over 95 percent accuracy, according to new research.

Weill Cornell, New York Genome Center Win NCI Grant to Support New TCGA Phase

September 28, 2016

Investigators involved in the WCM-NYGC Weill Cornell Medicine-New York Genome Center (WCM-NYGC) for Functional and Clinical Interpretation of Tumor Profiles collaboration recently received just shy of $490,000 from the National Cancer Institute to help further data analysis for the Cancer Genome Atlas project.

New Big Data Approach Predicts Drug Toxicity in Humans

September 21, 2016

Researchers can now predict the odds of experimental drugs succeeding in clinical trials, thanks to a new data-driven approach developed by Weill Cornell Medicine scientists. The method detects toxic side effects that may disqualify drugs from human use, giving drug developers an early warning before initiating clinical trials, according to a new study published Sept. 15 inCell Chemical Biology.

Virtual Vision

September 10, 2016

In the 1966 film Fantastic Voyage, physicians were shrunk down to microscopic size to travel inside the human body and save a dying patient. Now, researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine are using virtual reality goggles to bring that fantasy to life—with the aim of improving cancer care.

Why we need precision medicine—now

September 1, 2016

The launch of President Obama’s Precision Medicine Initiative is putting a cutting-edge approach to research and patient care on the map.  Academic medical centers have been pioneering the development of precision medicine for more than a decade—and now it’s time for the biopharmaceutical industry to get deeper in the game.

From ‘tache to test: Movember Foundation funds research into non-invasive blood test for metastatic prostate cancer

August 2, 2016

In order to benefit from the latest advances in precision medicine, Himisha Beltran, M.D., has to subject her prostate cancer patients to invasive biopsies that can be painful, expensive, difficult to perform, and not always feasible.

But she is hoping to harness new genomic sequencing technologies to track tumor activity from a simple blood draw, and a $1 million grant from the Prostate Cancer Foundation may help make the dream a clinical reality.

EXaCT-1 Precision Medicine Cancer Test Validated for Clinical Usage

July 19, 2016

A powerful next-generation genome-sequencing test developed at Weill Cornell Medicine can detect mutations that guide precision cancer treatment with over 95 percent accuracy, according to new research. The scientists say their findings, published July 20 in NPJ Genomic Medicine, validate the test, called Weill Cornell Medicine EXaCT-1, and demonstrate its feasibility in a clinical setting.

EIPM creates big data solution

July 12, 2016

One of the biggest challenges in precision medicine is what to do with the mountain of data generated from the sequencing of each tumor – how to parse out the relevant information and make it accessible and useful to the physicians making treatment decisions.  Ultimately, such data should be available for a function called Clinical Decision Support.  This function as defined by the Federal Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology is “knowledge and person-speci

EIPM to participate in White House-Led Precision Medicine Initiative

July 8, 2016

Moving with what has been cited as unprecedented speed, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has chosen a collaboration of four New York institutions — Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Hospital and NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem — to launch a landmark longitudinal research study as a part of President Barack Obama’s Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI).

The PMI Cohort Program aims to collect health, lifestyle and genetic information from 1 million or more people in the United States in efforts to improve disease treatment and prevention.

Defining Our Cancer Moonshot

July 2, 2016

In what evolved into a cancer moonshot think tank, a special event was held at Weill Cornell Medicine on June 29, one of 270 held in tandem across the United States convened by Vice President Joe Biden, with a national summit at Howard University in Washington, DC.

Weill Cornell Medicine Englander Institute for Precision Medicine 413 E 69th Street
Belfer Research Building
New York, NY 10021