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#358 AGBT Precision Health 2025 Meeting Recaps and Reflections

#358 AGBT Precision Health 2025 Meeting Recaps and Reflections

The AGBT Precision Health 2025 Meeting took place this week at the sunny and gorgeous Loews Coronado Bay Resort in the San Diego, California area. 

This conference brings together leading genomics researchers, healthcare professionals, and healthcare industry stakeholders to usher in a new era of precision medicine. Precision Health remains at the forefront of cutting-edge technologies, real-world implementation, and groundbreaking research in genomic medicine. Since its launch in 2016, this meeting has showcased the most impactful discoveries and large-scale initiatives shaping the future of healthcare—from national genomics strategies and international biobank efforts to hospital-driven diagnostic innovation and reimbursement models. Building on AGBT’s legacy of spotlighting transformative technologies and fostering public-private collaboration, the Precision Health Meeting emphasizes advances in clinical diagnostics, therapeutic development, and our growing understanding of genotype-phenotype relationships.  

Some of the biggest names in genomics presented and we caught up with a few of them to capture their insights on the show to share with all of you.

The Guests

Dr. Eric Green is the former director of the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH). As NHGRI director, Dr. Green leads the Institute's research programs and other initiatives. He has played an instrumental leadership role in developing many high-profile efforts relevant to genomics. Dr. Green received his B.S. degree in bacteriology from the University of Wisconsin - Madison in 1981, and his M.D. and Ph.D. degrees from Washington University in 1987. Coincidentally, 1987 was the same year that the word “genomics” was coined. Dr. Green’s relationship with the Institute began long before his appointment as director. He served as the Institute’s scientific director (2002 - 2009), chief of the NHGRI Genome Technology Branch (1996 - 2009) and founding director of the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center (1997 - 2009). Prior to that, he played an integral role in the Human Genome Project. Dr. Green is a founding editor of the journal Genome Research (1995 - present) and a series editor of Genome Analysis: A Laboratory Manual (1994 - 1998), both published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. He is also co-editor of Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics (since 2005). Throughout his career, he has authored and co-authored over 385 scientific publications. Dr. Green is a recurring guest on DNA Today, and he might hold the title as the guest who has been on the show the most times! 

Dr. Christine Eng is the Chief Medical Officer and Chief Quality Officer at Baylor Genetics, where she leads their clinical strategy and ensures the highest standards in genetic testing for patients across all ages, especially children with rare, undiagnosed genetic disorders. She is also the Vice Chair for Diagnostic Laboratory Affairs at Baylor College of Medicine. As a board-certified pediatrician and clinical geneticist, she has spent her career at the intersection of improving patient care, scientific innovation, and genomic medicine. Dr. Eng has been a pioneer in implementing genomics into clinical practice, and her work is shining a light on how RNAseq and multi-omic approaches are transforming the way we diagnose and care for patients. Stay tuned for a future episode where we dive deeper about RNAseq and other multi-omic approaches with Dr. Eng. 

Marina Sirota is currently a Professor and the Acting Director at the Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute at UCSF. Prior to that she has worked as a Senior Research Scientist at Pfizer where she focused on developing Precision Medicine strategies in drug discovery. She completed her PhD in Biomedical Informatics at Stanford University. Dr. Sirota’s research experience in translational bioinformatics spans nearly 20 years during which she has co-authored over 170 scientific publications. Her research interests lie in developing computational integrative methods and applying these approaches in the context of disease diagnostics and therapeutics with a special focus on women’s health. The Sirota laboratory is funded by NIA, NLM, NIAMS, Pfizer, March of Dimes and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund. As a young leader in the field, she has been awarded the AMIA Young Investigator Award in 2017. She leads the UCSF March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at UCSF as well as co-directs ENACT, a center to study precision medicine for endometriosis. Dr. Sirota also is the founding director of the AI4ALL program at UCSF, with the goal of introducing high school girls to applications of AI and machine learning in biomedicine.

Resources:

The Advances in Genome Biology and Technology (AGBT) website

AGBT Precision Health Conference website 

Baylor Genetics website

Baylor Genetics to Showcase RNA Sequencing Breakthroughs for Rare Disease Diagnosis at 2025 AGBT Precision Health Meeting

The Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute at UCSF

Li, Y., et al. (2025). Cell-type-directed network-correcting combination therapy for Alzheimer’s disease. Cell. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2025.06.035

Relevant DNA Today Episodes:

#19 Obama’s Precision Medicine Initiative

#29 Precision Medicine Initiative and 21st Century Cures Act

#150 Euan Ashley and Stephen Quake on The Genome Odyssey

#172 PhenoTips: Advances in Rare Disease Diagnosis

#182 Eric Green on the Complete Human Genome Project 

#260 PhenoTips: Population Genomics in Clinical Practice

#214 Genetics Wrapped 2022

#236 Assessing for Alzheimer’s Disease with Quest Diagnostics

#266 Genetics Wrapped 2023

#318 Genetics Wrapped 2024

Mark your calendar for the general AGBT conference in Orlando, FL from Feb 23rd to 26th, which I am hoping to attend. And next September 2026 in Coronado, California for the AGBT Precision Health conference. 

Get ready, genetic nerds—another brand-new episode of DNA Today drops this Friday! You can always count on us to deliver fresh content every Friday. 

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DNA Today is hosted and produced by Kira Dineen, MS, LCGC, CG(ASCP)CM . Our Video Lead is Amanda Andreoli. Our Social Media Lead Liv Davidson. And our logo Graphic Designer is Ashlyn Enokian, MS, CGC. 

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#357 Advice for Science Grad School Applications

#357 Advice for Science Grad School Applications