G-KnowMe Collaborates to Automate Clinical Interpretation of Whole Genome Sequencing in Cancer

Bangalore-based informatics startup G-KnowMe(https://g-knowme.com/)  has entered into  a partnership with researchers at the University of Cambridge and the Cambridge  University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) to develop an automated workflow for  interpreting data from sequencing the entire genome of cancers. 

Genome sequencing has significantly advanced our understanding of cancer at an individual level. Patient’s tumors carry information that are key to guiding treatment and also provide  novel insights. A large amount of scientific information connected to the genetic profile for  understanding tumor biology, is published and publicly available to be interpreted by  scientists. However such information is not always available in a format that is structured for  scaling up this process. Streamlining a method to process the available information,  compiling and selecting relevant pieces and staying abreast of emerging updates, are major  challenges to the adoption of genome sequencing in the clinic.  

As genome sequencing costs drastically fall, the line between its usage in clinical research  and clinical management of the disease is blurred. The lure to extract maximum patient  relevant information is increasing, for better management of the disease. “Whole genome sequencing (WGS) of cancers is emerging as the new paradigm in cancer management as  Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology scales and the cost of sequencing drops.  But timely interpretation of the data to make informed clinical decisions is the challenge.  Clinical interpretation of WGS data for the breast cancer patient management will be  developed under this collaboration’’, commented Professor Jean Abraham, Director of the  Precision Breast Cancer Institute at the University of Cambridge. “To achieve this at scale,”  she added, “we need to rely on cutting-edge automation and natural language processing  tools powered by artificial intelligence." 

Tumor profiles carry information that can personalize treatment plans, predict response or  resistance to approved therapies, suggest off-label therapies or relevant clinical trials for a  patient, and at the same time identify any inherited basis for the cancer. “G-KnowMe is  leveraging its combined expertise in AI and cancer biology to develop solutions that enable  adoption of large panels in clinical management of cancer. While our platform G-KnowMiner  is already in use by large diagnostics labs the Indian market to interpret data from NGS  panels used for cancer diagnostics, expanding its scope to interpreting WGS data, within a  clinically relevant time frame is what we aim to achieve through this partnership”,  commented Nimisha Gupta’’, Founder, G-KnowMe.