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WEBINAR: Variant interpretation: from the clinic to the lab… and back again

This webinar has ended. Watch the recording or download the slides.

Description:

The use of genomic testing is increasing rapidly as the cost of genome sequencing decreases. Many areas of the health workforce are upskilling in genomics to help meet the increased demand. From clinicians learning how to use the right test, for the right patient, at the right time, to medical scientists learning how to interpret and classify variants, and data scientists to learning how to better create and continuously refine the pipelines and software to handle and curate big data.

In this webinar, we’ll hear from two people working at the coalface of variant interpretation – one in a diagnostic laboratory and the other in a cancer research laboratory.

Naomi Baker is Medical Scientist at Victorian Clinical Genetics Services. She helps process hundreds of genomic tests per year to find the variants that cause rare diseases. She’ll explain the clinical variant interpretation processes she uses, the pipelines, professions and people involved.

Joep Vissers is a Curation Team Leader, at the University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research, Department of Clinical Pathology. Joep, who also teaches cancer biology at the University, will describe how he uses variant interpretation in his work at the research/clinical interface, and the shift in mindset required when working with data for these different purposes.

Amy Nisselle, Genomics Workforce Lead at Melbourne Genomics, will then briefly outline some of the education programs available in clinical variant interpretation.

Speakers: 

Naomi Baker, Medical Scientist, Victorian Clinical Genetics Services

Joep Vissers, Curation Team Leader, The University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research, Department of Clinical Pathology

Amy Nisselle, Genomics Workforce Lead, Melbourne Genomics

Who the webinar is for:

This webinar is for anyone interested in how genomics technologies and workflows are used to inform clinical practice.

Whether you’re wanting to get started in translational research, curating big data in a clinical setting or just curious about careers and opportunities in clinical genomics there is something in this webinar for you.

When: 7 December, 1pm AEDT/ 12pm AEST/ 12:30pm ACDT/ 10am AWST

How to join:

Registrations are now closed.

This webinar is co-hosted by Australian BioCommons and Melbourne Genomics.

Cover image: Your Genome Project. CC-BY-SA 2.0.