The main goal of treating hypertension is to reduce blood pressure to physiological levels and thereby prevent risk of cardiovascular disease and hypertension-associated target organ damage. Despite reductions in major risk factors and the availability of a plethora of effective antihypertensive drugs, the control of blood pressure to target values is still poor due to multiple factors including apparent drug resistance and lack of adherence. An explanation for this problem is related to the current reductionist and 'trial-and-error' approach in the management of hypertension, as we may oversimplify the complex nature of the disease and not pay enough attention to the heterogeneity of the pathophysiology and clinical presentation of the disorder. Taking into account specific risk factors, genetic phenotype, pharmacokinetic characteristics, and other particular features unique to each patient, would allow a personalized approach to managing the disease. Personalized medicine therefore represents the tailoring of medical approach and treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient and is expected to become the paradigm of future healthcare. The advancement of systems biology research and the rapid development of high-throughput technologies, as well as the characterization of different -omics, have contributed to a shift in modern biological and medical research from traditional hypothesis-driven designs toward data-driven studies and have facilitated the evolution of personalized or precision medicine for chronic diseases such as hypertension.

Personalized medicine-a modern approach for the diagnosis and management of hypertension / Savoia, Carmine; Volpe, Massimo; Grassi, Guido; Borghi, Claudio; Agabiti Rosei, Enrico; Touyz, Rhian M.. - In: CLINICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 1470-8736. - STAMPA. - 131:22(2017), pp. 2671-2685. [10.1042/CS20160407]

Personalized medicine-a modern approach for the diagnosis and management of hypertension

Savoia, Carmine
Funding Acquisition
;
Volpe, Massimo;Touyz, Rhian M.
2017

Abstract

The main goal of treating hypertension is to reduce blood pressure to physiological levels and thereby prevent risk of cardiovascular disease and hypertension-associated target organ damage. Despite reductions in major risk factors and the availability of a plethora of effective antihypertensive drugs, the control of blood pressure to target values is still poor due to multiple factors including apparent drug resistance and lack of adherence. An explanation for this problem is related to the current reductionist and 'trial-and-error' approach in the management of hypertension, as we may oversimplify the complex nature of the disease and not pay enough attention to the heterogeneity of the pathophysiology and clinical presentation of the disorder. Taking into account specific risk factors, genetic phenotype, pharmacokinetic characteristics, and other particular features unique to each patient, would allow a personalized approach to managing the disease. Personalized medicine therefore represents the tailoring of medical approach and treatment to the individual characteristics of each patient and is expected to become the paradigm of future healthcare. The advancement of systems biology research and the rapid development of high-throughput technologies, as well as the characterization of different -omics, have contributed to a shift in modern biological and medical research from traditional hypothesis-driven designs toward data-driven studies and have facilitated the evolution of personalized or precision medicine for chronic diseases such as hypertension.
2017
compliance; hypertesion; personalized medicine; systems biology; antihypertensive agents; blood pressure; genomics; humans; hypertension; risk factors; systems biology; treatment outcome; patient selection; precision medicine; medicine
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Personalized medicine-a modern approach for the diagnosis and management of hypertension / Savoia, Carmine; Volpe, Massimo; Grassi, Guido; Borghi, Claudio; Agabiti Rosei, Enrico; Touyz, Rhian M.. - In: CLINICAL SCIENCE. - ISSN 1470-8736. - STAMPA. - 131:22(2017), pp. 2671-2685. [10.1042/CS20160407]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1018506
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