German China

Smart Therapies AI to Customize Treatment for Cardiovascular Patients

Source: Press release European Society of Cardiology 2 min Reading Time

Related Vendor

The Nextgen project is a unique and innovative project that makes use of artificial intelligence to customize therapies for cardiovascular patients based on their genetic and health information.

An innovative project using artificial intelligence to personalize therapies for patients with cardiovascular disease has kicked off at a meeting in Utrecht, the Netherlands.(Source:  Pixabay)
An innovative project using artificial intelligence to personalize therapies for patients with cardiovascular disease has kicked off at a meeting in Utrecht, the Netherlands.
(Source: Pixabay)

Sophia Antipolis/France – An innovative project using artificial intelligence (AI) to personalize therapies for patients with cardiovascular disease has kicked off at a meeting in Utrecht, the Netherlands. The Nextgen project has received 7.6 million euros from the EU’s Horizon Europe programme and will be delivered by a 21-member consortium, including the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of death globally, accounting for nearly 18 million fatalities every year. In the EU, CVDs are responsible for approximately one in three deaths. CVD comes with a high price, and is estimated to cost the EU 282 billion euros annually, equivalent to 2 % of Europe’s GDP. CVD also takes its toll on individuals, often leading to disability, absence from work, premature retirement, and absenteeism.

Personalized medicine, whereby prevention and treatment of disease is tailored to an individual’s unique genetic make-up and health information, holds promise for shifting the dial on the burden of CVD. Now is the time to harness the potential of individualized treatment. Genetic information is more readily available than ever before as the cost of laboratory analysis continues to fall, and cutting-edge AI techniques make it possible to combine vast amounts of data in record time.

Nextgen will capitalize on these trends by bringing together clinical research organizations, universities, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), and professional associations to integrate multiple sources of data on individual people. This work is complex due to data privacy and governance requirements, the presence of multiple standards across Europe, varying formats of data, and the sheer volume of information.

The first step will be to map out the initiatives already underway to ensure that the project is truly ground-breaking and meets an unmet need. Consortium members will then develop novel tools to merge different types of data in a secure way that upholds individual privacy and allows the information to be used in research. The effectiveness of the methods for removing current barriers to data integration in CVD will be demonstrated in real-world pilot studies.

The work will complement the 1+ Million Genomes initiative, which aims to enable secure access to genomics and clinical data across Europe, and the European Health Data Space, a European Commission governance framework for the safe and secure exchange, use and reuse of health data.

Consortium member Professor Panos Deloukas of Queen Mary University of London, UK, said: “This is a tremendous opportunity and a challenge we have in building the right toolbox that will allow [us] to unite CVD patient data across Europe and implement precision medicine to improve cardiovascular healthcare.”

Project coordinator Professor Pim van der Harst of University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, said: “No two people are exactly the same, and so it makes sense that each person needs a slightly different strategy to optimize their health. Personalized medicine is therefore the way forward for preventing heart disease, speeding up diagnosis, and monitoring and treating people with CVD. To develop individualized therapies, we need to compile as much information as possible about individuals, and that’s where Nextgen comes in. The unique picture we generate will then form the basis for improving cardiovascular health and wellbeing.”

(ID:49937049)

Subscribe to the newsletter now

Don't Miss out on Our Best Content

By clicking on „Subscribe to Newsletter“ I agree to the processing and use of my data according to the consent form (please expand for details) and accept the Terms of Use. For more information, please see our Privacy Policy. The consent declaration relates, among other things, to the sending of editorial newsletters by email and to data matching for marketing purposes with selected advertising partners (e.g., LinkedIn, Google, Meta)

Unfold for details of your consent