By Alaric Dearment, MedCity News | July 21, 2019

While well-developed in cancers, precision medicine’s readiness for prime time beyond oncology varies markedly from disease to disease. But reimbursement remains a significant hurdle.

More than a decade ago, the science fiction author William Gibson said, “The future is here – it’s just not evenly distributed.” It’s impossible to know exactly what went through his mind when he said that, but the statement could just as easily be applied to the field of precision medicine.

Much of the focus on precision medicine – which involves taking into account individual patients’ genetics, environment and lifestyle – has focused on cancers, especially with the rise of next-generation sequencing (NGS) and drugs that target specific biomarkers.

Of course, precision medicine has also seen development in other disease areas like ophthalmology, neurology, rheumatology and pulmonology. But whereas precision medicine’s progress in oncology is well-established, it’s less so in other disease areas and even varies among them.

“It’s way behind oncology,” said Dr. Geoffrey Chupp, professor of medicine at Yale University and director of the Yale Center for Asthma and Airways Disease, in a phone interview, referring to how precision medicine is being developed in pulmonology.

At the other end of the continuum lies ophthalmology.

“Ophthalmology has been really on the forefront of genetic research, with more than 260 genes identified as causing inherited retinal disease,” said Dr. Bradley Straatsma, professor emeritus of medicine at the University of California Los Angeles, in a phone interview.