TMF-Veranstaltung

OMICS in Medical Research 2nd edition

TMF-Workshop

Mercure Hotel MOA Berlin
10:00 - 18:30 Uhr
TMF-Sitzung

© Grafik: sabelskaya – stock.adobe.com

The workshop takes place on 10.12.2018 in Berlin and will address important topics from omics-based medical research, with a sideways glance at their potential relevance to clinical care.

Anmeldung

Contact

Dr. Roman Siddiqui (content-related issues)
Phone: +49 30 22 00 24 752 | E-Mail

Kerstin Splett (organisational issues)
Phone: +49 30 22 00 24 771 | E-Mail

Juliane Gehrke (organisational issues)
Phone: +49 30 22 00 24 717 | E-Mail
 

Registration

The workshop is booked up.
 

Venue

Mercure Hotel MOA Berlin
Stephanstraße 41
10559 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 39 40 430 | E-Mail
 

Hotel Recommendations

Mercure Hotel MOA Berlin
Stephanstraße 41
10559 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 39 40 430 | E-Mail

Motel One Berlin-Hauptbahnhof
Invalidenstraße 54
10557 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 364 10 050 | E-Mail

  1. Room Contingent

Aletto Hotel Kudamm GmbH
Hardenbergstraße 21
10623 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 23 32 14 100 | E-Mail
 

Please note:
Participation fee will be 30 € including refreshments. Please note, however, that travel costs cannot be reimbursed.
 

Programme

The workshop will address important topics from omics-based medical research, with a sideways glance at their potential relevance to clinical care. Presentations will highlight the role of omics in cardiovascular disease and oncology in particular, and will also address the emerging use of artificial intelligence in the clinic.
As a special focus, the workshop will take a look at the role of Germany in current international efforts to establish omics-based medical research as a driver of ‘next generation medicine’ (e.g. Human Cell Atlas, ICGC-ARGO, GA4GH). Distinguished speakers will present the visions underlying these initiatives and examine Germany’s readiness to meet the challenges of future medicine.
Since all the above efforts depend upon access to, and use of, high-quality clinical data, the workshop will also explore how systems medicine and bioinformatics may benefit from the ‘Medical Informatics Initiative’, a recent national funding program by BMBF. More specifically, the workshop will contour the links required between clinical data standards (HL7, LOINC etc.) and the omics world.
The workshop will also address the prerequisites to integrate and responsibly share large amounts of sensitive medical data for research. Since international cooperation is paramount for the translation of basic research into clinical practice, special attention will be paid to the legal framework of collaborative research in genetics and genomics.

Of note, the day after the workshop, the 7th National Biobanking Symposium will take place at the same venue and open under the headline “Fit for purpose – Omics and novel medical models and materials”, pinpointing the great demand for high-quality human biomaterial for omics-based research.