The twin questions of personalized medicine: who are you and whom do you most resemble?
-
Correspondence: Isaac S Kohane Isaac_kohane@harvard.edu
Harvard Medical School, 10 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA
Genome Medicine 2009, 1:4 doi:10.1186/gm4
Published: 20 January 2009Abstract
Personalized medicine is typically described as the use of molecular or genetic characteristics to customize therapy. This perspective at best provides an incomplete model of the patient and at worst can lead to grossly inappropriate practices. Personalization of medicine requires two characterizations: a well-grounded understanding of who the patient is and an equally robust understanding of the subpopulation that most resembles that patient in the context of the decisions at hand. These characterizations are readily represented probabilistically and can be used to drive decision-making in a rational manner that maximizes the positive outcomes for the patient.