News

AHA funds personalized medicine initiative


 

The American Heart Association has set aside a 5-year, $30-million research fund to dig deeper into two large national studies in hopes of finding more clues to personalized treatment and prevention of cardiovascular disease.

The organization and its two main collaborators, the University of Mississippi and Boston University, announced the new initiative during the AHA's annual scientific sessions.

"The collaboration has a vision of greatly expanding important population studies by adding more research subjects, more diverse subjects, more genetic analysis, and deeper new approaches to gathering information" leading toward personalized medicine, the AHA said in a news release.

The collaborative group, which has a temporary name of "Heart Studies v2.0," plans to analyze further the Framingham Heart Study, which is the longest-running U.S. heart study, and the Jackson Heart Study, which is the largest study to focus on risk factors among African Americans.

"The potential here is nothing short of amazing," Dr. Joseph Loscalzo, chair of the collaboration's Science Oversight Group, said in a statement. "The vast participant database from these important studies, plus additional genetic components, puts us on the path to finding specific risk determinants for certain cardiovascular diseases for every person."

In a video interview, Dr. Dan Jones, University of Mississippi chancellor and former Jackson Heart Study principle investigator, further explained the collaboration and its potential impact on practice.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

Recommended Reading

New psychoactive drug nomenclature system devised
MDedge Internal Medicine
Doctors keep it simple, ditch insurance
MDedge Internal Medicine
Failure to diagnose
MDedge Internal Medicine
Murthy nominated to be Surgeon General
MDedge Internal Medicine
What is UnitedHealthcare doing?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Embracing change is the only option in ACA era
MDedge Internal Medicine
AMA delegates take on SGR, ICD-10, grace period for exchange plans
MDedge Internal Medicine
Can Congress fix the SGR this year?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Point/Counterpoint: Will Choosing Wisely improve quality of care?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Supreme Court will decide contraceptive coverage fate in ACA
MDedge Internal Medicine