TGIO 2020 Challenge Winner Announced

Use of Genomics to Transform the Cancer Patient Pathway - winning project chosen.

Last month, the Translating Genomics in Oncology (TGIO) 2020 event was co-hosted by two Centre programmes - Early Detection and Onco-Innovation - together with the University Enterprise Zone. This cross-sector event attracted an enthusiastic audience of over 150 people from 10 countries, including PhD students, academic and industry researchers, clinicians, legal professionals and venture partners, and covered topics such as the challenges of translation, benefits of a multidisciplinary approach, routes for translation and clinical considerations.

The event also launched the TGIO 2020 Entrepreneurial Challenge Use of Genomics to Transform the Cancer Patient Pathway, and we are delighted to announce the winning team of Dilrini De Silva, Paulo Amaral and Javier Armisen, who proposed A cell-based platform for high-throughput PGx variant identification and validation.

The team impressed the judges with their approach, with Dr Michael Salako from Start Codon saying: “It is a pleasure to be able to award this prize to such a strong team, who are taking a unique approach to tackle an issue with high unmet need. We believe the team could greatly benefit from our mentoring and support and very much look forward to engaging with them at this critical step in their entrepreneurial journey.”

Dr Dilrini De Silva commented “We are delighted to be recognised for our vision to deliver pharmacogenomic insights for underrepresented populations to truly benefit from precision medicine. We look forward to engaging with the Start Codon and Illumina Accelerator Cambridge teams to help us achieve this goal and enhance our business proposition.”

The TGIO Team would like to thank everyone who participated in the TGIO 2020 event and challenge, as well as our sponsors Start Codon, Illumina Accelerator and CRUK Entrepreneurial Programmes. Watch this space for future events in 2021!

18 Nov 2020