Scientific discovery and transformational outcomes cannot happen without a shared vision. For these teams, the possibilities of the future guide what they do today. They imagine what medicine could look like, they explore the opportunities and they create transformational medicines that will shape the next decade and beyond for people living with serious diseases.
Focusing on interdisciplinary translational medicine illuminates the best approaches — whether those might be monotherapies or combinations of therapies — to both refine and define current standards of care. A precision approach uncovers the right pathways and targets for specific patient populations, integrating these insights with appropriate modalities, combinations and sequencing. This leads to maximum therapeutic benefit for patients with serious diseases and a transformational pipeline of promising molecules, first-in-class treatments and best-in-class medicines.
In Cambridge, several disciplines focus on translational research, seamlessly connecting with the thematic research centers to develop potential new medicines for the clinic. Other translational scientists track the effects and doses of new molecules, measuring everything against the original scientific hypothesis. Together with pathologists, translational scientists also look at that patient response to identify the best doses and combinations for registrational trials.
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Predictive sciences are embedded in everything that we do within research and development. This is a group that can take massive amounts of data, whether it's genetic, translational or genomics data, and distill it into therapeutic hypotheses that we can actually act on.
Robert Plenge, MD, PhD, Executive Vice President, Chief Research Officer, Head of Research
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