Individuals respond to pharmaceutical treatments differently due to the heterogeneity of patient populations. This heterogeneity can make it difficult to determine how efficacious or burdensome a treatment is for an individual patient. Personalized medicine involves using patient characteristics, therapeutics, or diagnostic testing to understand how individual patients respond to a given treatment. Personalized medicine increases the health impact of existing treatments by improving the matching process between patients and treatments and by improving a patient’s understanding of the risk of serious side effects. In this paper, the author compares the health impact of new treatment innovations with the potential health impact of personalized medicine. The author finds that the impact of personalized medicine depends on the number of treatments, the correlation between treatment effects, and the amount of noise in a patient’s individual treatment effect signal. For multiple sclerosis treatments, the author finds that personalized medicine has the potential to increase the health impact of existing treatments by roughly 50% by informing patients of their individual treatment effect and risk of serious side effects.
Navigating private equity in health care amid regulatory scrutiny
She joined Leslie C. Overton from Axinn Veltrop & Harkrider LLP and Rebekah Goshorn Jurata of the American Investment Council to discuss the growing antitrust...