When could personalised medicine move mainstream?

Scientific breakthroughs the key driver

clock • 4 min read

Rathbones' head of collectives research Mona Shah asks if precision medicine is a reality or just wishful thinking.

In the late 1990s, advances in research and development (R&D) promised to revolutionise the pharmaceutical industry. Scientists were on the cusp of mapping the human genome, which is the DNA 'genetic barcode' containing the information to build, repair and run our bodies. It also contains clues about things that might go wrong as we age and which medicines might work best for us. It was believed this would enable us to take a big step towards personalised medicine (also known as precision medicine) and away from the existing 'one-size-fits-all' model of the past.  Woodford buys ...

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