Abstract
Personalized medicine has the potential to revolutionize patient care. In order to do so, it requires a re-engineering of many life sciences and healthcare processes, the most significant being the integration of the complete biomarker lifecycle from discovery to targeted treatment of patients. Individual patient omic profiles have become a reality owing to the diminishing cost of DNA sequencing. However, managing these data has created a bottleneck due to: the limitations in storage, computing power and information access; the lack of biologist-friendly software to replace the user-unfriendly custom scripts, which are crippling collaboration; the urgency for standardizing data across omics and clinical data realms for cross-study comparisons; undermining innovations of enterprise and open-source software, which saps innovations of open-source and reliability and support of enterprise software; and unavailability of a robust, integrative workflow system, which leads to actionable data at the patient care level.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank S Velez of Harvard University (MA, USA) for his input on an earlier version of this manuscript.
Financial & competing interests disclosure
The authors are employees of Oracle Corporation. The authors have no other relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript apart from those disclosed.
No writing assistance was utilized in the production of this manuscript.