how genetic testing is useful to clinical trials

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My understanding is that for clinical trials, they essentially look at the dna “history” of each person with a disease (among other things), looking for common traits or mutations. How does this information then relate to what drugs they’re going to start testing?
If I find a common trait, do you want common symptoms to start treating them?

Apologize if my understanding is completely butchering reality

In: Biology

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

first it would look to to see if there are common traits among sufferers; if we know 85% of people with AAAA have genetic code like 135WGC45 we could develop better tests for earlier diagnosis and treatment.

second, we now have medicine (therapy) that works directly to counter faulty genetic code….gene therapy.

one recent and very successful therapy is for the disease: cystic fibrosis; about 50% of all people with cyctic fibrosis have the same genetic “flaw” in their genes. so we know which CF patients can be prescribed this new medicine and that gene therapy is very specific to a mutation causing the disease and not the disease itself

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