Digital twins Computer models that could soon personalise medical care
The Guardian|November 13, 2023
Imagine having a digital twin that gets ill, and can be experimented on to identify the best possible treatment, without you having to go near a pill or a surgeon's knife. Scientists believe that within five to 10 years, "in silico" trials - in which hundreds of virtual organs are used to assess the safety and efficacy of drugs - could become routine, while patient-specific organ models could be used to personalise treatment and avoid medical complications.
Linda Geddes
Digital twins Computer models that could soon personalise medical care

Digital twins are computational models of physical objects or processes, updated using data from their real-world counterparts. Within medicine, this means combining vast amounts of data about the workings of genes, proteins, cells and whole-body systems with patients' personal data to create virtual models of their organs - and eventually, potentially their entire body.

"If you practise medicine today, a lot of it isn't very scientific," said Prof Peter Coveney, the director of the Centre for Computational Science at University College London and a co-author of Virtual You. "Often, it is equivalent to driving a car and working out where to go next by looking in the rear-view mirror: you try to figure out how to treat the patient in front of you based on people you've seen in the past who had similar conditions.

"What a digital twin is doing is using your data inside a model that represents how your physiology and pathology is working. It is not  making decisions about you based on a population that might be completely unrepresentative. It is genuinely personalised."

The current state-of-the-art model can be found in cardiology.

This story is from the November 13, 2023 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the November 13, 2023 edition of The Guardian.

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