AMP 2014: Themes & Thoughts
AMP 2014: Themes & Thoughts
Along with our CEO, Ravnish Bhalla, and clinical lab professional Matt Watson, I was privileged to attend the 20th Anniversary Meeting of the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) last week in Washington DC, and connect with many great folks doing pioneering work in the field of genomics and molecular health. This year’s theme, “Realizing the Dream of Precision Medicine,” was on full display with dynamic sessions on science, practice and policy related to molecular pathology, and a rich variety of corporate partners and exhibiting companies presenting next-generation offerings.
One unmistakable trend was the explosion of interest in bioinformatics. AMP itself took a major step this year and established an Informatics Subdivision; informatics will now join Infectious Diseases, Hematopathology, Solid Tumors, and Genetics as specialization areas for members. Both in the program sessions and in the exhibit hall informatics was on full display as a key area of focus. Bioinformatics leaders exhibiting included GenomOncology, Omicia, NextCODE Health (acquired by Wuxi AppTec), BioDiscovery, Bina Technologies and more.
Looking for high quality curated cancer data? See what we offer at booth 723, #AMP2014. Manually curated #TCGA data and more. #genetics
— BioDiscovery Inc. (@BioDiscoveryInc) November 14, 2014
The most exceptional software isn’t of much use without data to work with, of course, and sequencing and testing equipment providers were out in full force as well. From industry titans Illumina and Life Technologies, to focused players such as RainDance Technologies, HTG Molecular, and Cancer Genetics, the exhibit hall was packed with the latest technologies and platforms to enable the vision of “precision medicine”.
Stop by booth #1216 and say hello to Chris and Eric at #AMP2014. Ask about our free t-shirts too! pic.twitter.com/UBPTWgB6ac
— RainDance (@RainDanceTech) November 14, 2014
In walking the floor of the exhibit hall, I was struck by both the pace of innovation in the field and the sheer complexity of the myriad devices, data sources, software solutions and tests on display. Each clearly offered a potential piece of the diagnostic puzzle, but at the same time, with each new device or widget comes a new challenge of integrating it into existing laboratory workflows and technologies. It is clearly a challenge that won’t disappear anytime soon, and I expect “integration” to be a big theme of laboratory management and optimization in the coming years. Perhaps we’ll see AMP 2015 be “Realizing the Dream of Holistic Diagnostic Integration.”
So stay tuned for next year. Our team at Technossus is certainly looking forward to it…
Well #AMP2014 was great and Washington was pretty spectacular too pic.twitter.com/rixMefkaEO
— H Martin (@Dr_H_Martin) November 16, 2014
Thank you, @AMPath for a successful #AMP2014 meeting. We can’t wait for #AMP2015 in Austin, Texas. pic.twitter.com/KSYTATEijp
— Asuragen (@Asuragen) November 17, 2014