Modern medicine is becoming more personal—but not always simpler. Two patients may have the same diagnosis, receive the same medication, and still experience very different outcomes. One may respond well. Another may not improve. A third may develop serious side effects. The difference may lie in genetics, biomarkers, disease biology, medication metabolism, environmental factors, or risks that standard treatment plans do not fully explain.
Precision Medicine Textbook is a practical clinical guide for medical students, residents, clinicians, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, researchers, and healthcare trainees who want to understand how genomics, biomarker testing, pharmacogenomics, and personalized treatment are changing clinical decision-making.
This book focuses on the real questions healthcare professionals face as precision medicine moves into everyday care: When should genetic testing be ordered? How should biomarker results influence treatment? Which patients may benefit from targeted therapy? When can pharmacogenomic data improve medication selection or dosing? How should clinicians explain uncertain results? And how can personalized care be used responsibly without overtesting, overspending, or creating false reassurance?
Rather than presenting precision medicine as futuristic hype, this textbook explains its true clinical value: using better information to make better decisions for the individual patient. It shows how genomics, molecular testing, biomarkers, and medication-response data can improve diagnosis, risk assessment, treatment selection, safety, and long-term care—while still requiring clinical judgment, patient communication, ethics, and common sense.
Inside, readers will find practical guidance on:
• Understanding the foundations of genetics, genomics, molecular medicine, and biomarker testing
• Using genetic and molecular data to support diagnosis, prognosis, prevention, and treatment planning
• Applying pharmacogenomics to medication selection, dosing, drug response, and adverse-effect risk
• Interpreting biomarkers in cancer care, chronic disease, rare disease, and targeted therapy decisions
• Recognizing the limits of genetic testing, uncertain findings, false reassurance, and overdiagnosis
• Addressing privacy, consent, cost, equity, ethics, and patient trust in personalized medicine
• Building patient-centered treatment plans that combine scientific data with clinical judgment and individual values
What makes this book valuable is its realistic clinical focus. Precision medicine is not about replacing clinicians with algorithms, laboratory reports, or genetic profiles. It is about asking better questions, choosing the right test for the right patient, understanding what the result truly means, and turning complex information into safer, more thoughtful care.
Whether you are preparing for clinical rotations, studying genomics, prescribing medications, working with cancer biomarkers, supporting patients through testing decisions, or building confidence in modern clinical practice, Precision Medicine Textbook gives you a clear and practical foundation for one of the most important changes in healthcare.