Analysis for Healthcare Diagnostics and Theranostics
Topics: Analytical Chemistry, Biochemistry, Physical Chemistry, Keywords: Systems/Devices to Inform Therapy, Physical Techniques for Diagnostics, High-Throughput Measurement and Analysis, Real-time Clinical Measurement
Date: /6/7/8/ September 2010, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, Europe
Web Site, Contact: events@rsc.org
Official Information:
This meeting aims to bring together scientists from many disciplines, including biologists, physicists and chemists, involving academics and industrialists from the healthcare and biosensing communities.
The need in healthcare to detect biomolecular species such as proteins, oligonucleotides (DNA and RNA) and cells for diagnostics is driving the current development of physical techniques. The development is generally based on optical, electrochemical and mass spectrometric transduction to enable these measurements. These are now also being exploited in array formats, enabling the development of high throughput detection to inform systems biology and pathway medicine by giving new insights into biomolecular pathways and the identification of new target analytes.
This is a highly topical and exciting area which opens up the real prospect of theranostics (the use of diagnostics in informing patient specific therapy), but for which development and optimisation of detection requires an understanding and control of the fundamental physical processes occurring both in sensing and in signal transduction and the comparatives merits of alternative detection strategies. For high throughput detection, bioinformatics (the processing and interpretation of vast amounts of data) also presents a real challenge.
Invited speakers include:
- Roger Tsien, University of California
- Pankaj Vadgama, Queen Mary University of London
- Nancy Allbriton, University of North Carolina
- Tony Cass, Imperial College London
- Graham Cooks, Purdue University
- Kev Dhaliwal, MRC Centre for Inflammation Research, Edinburgh
- Walter Koch, University College Dublin

