The past decade,  says, has been a revolution.

Thanks to advances in personalized medicine over the past 10 years, Evers says patients today receive treatments that are better tailored to their genetic makeup and specific medical history. Evers, the director of the 好色先生 Markey Cancer Center, along with , director of the Gill Heart Institute, appeared Sunday on  to discuss personalized medicine.

鈥淩eally it has been the last 10 years, I would say, that the revolution has occurred,鈥 Evers said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been in this business treating patients for 20 years and now is such an exciting time to be practicing medicine, to be doing research.鈥

In a wide-ranging conversation with KET鈥檚 Bill Goodman, Evers and Smyth discussed how personalized medicine is changing the landscape of cancer and cardiovascular treatments.

Check out some highlights from the interview and be sure to .

Smyth on defining personalized medicine

Personalized or precision medicine really means taking as much information about one individual as possible to be able to tailor specific treatments or preventative strategies toward them. So it鈥檚 taking their genetic information, taking information from environmental exposures they may have had and putting all of that together in a package that really chooses for that one particular person a best treatment or preventive strategy.

Evers on the pace of personalized treatment advances

I鈥檝e been in this business treating patients for 20 years and now is such an exciting time to be practicing medicine, to be doing research. Because 20 years ago, if a 35-year-old lady came in with colon cancer, she鈥檇 be treated the same way as an 85-year-old gentleman. We were very limited in terms of drugs, but it鈥檚 only been within the last 10 years, I would say, that there鈥檚 been an explosion of techniques, technologies that really have allowed us to 鈥 identify biomarkers to be able to treat patients differently.

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