The new San Antonio Partnership for Precision Therapeutics (SA PPT) is being established by UT Health San Antonio, Texas Biomedical Research Institute (Texas Biomed), The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) and Southwest Research Institute (SwRI®). This groundbreaking initiative will leverage the unique bioscience capabilities of the four institutions to address the specific and diverse medical needs of the city’s population while serving as a model for the development of therapies to improve medical treatment around the world.
While precision medicine generally focuses on personalized interventions that are based on genetics, environment and diet, precision therapeutics represents a unique merger of this discipline with the complete drug discovery pathway, encompassing and integrating the two which has not been done before. This drug discovery pathway includes basic research, lead compound development, formulation, testing, production, and clinical trials leading to new FDA-approved treatments. The goal of this program will be to create much needed, breakthrough treatments that can be individualized to specific patient populations.
“Precision therapeutics allows us to tailor our treatments from person to person, adapting for a patient’s lifestyle, environment and biology, within and across patient populations,” said Texas Biomed President and CEO Larry Schlesinger, M.D. “What is most exciting is that this program will completely integrate the approach of precision medicine with the discovery of new treatments as well as the reformulation of existing drugs and drug combinations to address the growing drug resistance problem. It’s a game-changing approach to health care that will allow us to more quickly get therapies to market and work for the majority of those who need it most.”
The San Antonio Advantage
With a Hispanic population that is expected to double by the year 2050, San Antonio currently reflects the demographics that the nation will experience in the coming decades. Of the city’s 1.5 million residents, 65% are Hispanic, and of this group, 91% are of Mexican descent.
This ethnic diversity makes the Alamo City a prime location for the development of a precision therapeutics model. In addition to better caring for San Antonians, the lessons learned from the SA PPT will provide scientists, researchers and clinicians with a deeper understanding of how to improve health care in their own communities as their demographics shift to look more like San Antonio’s current population.
Texas Biomed, UTSA, UT Health San Antonio and SwRI will integrate all of the capabilities needed to build a world-class program in precision therapeutics. Their work will be further backed by a local bioscience industry valued at more than $40 billion. In addition, our military medical research community has expressed an interest in being actively engaged. San Antonio’s collaborative culture in the bioscience area also lends itself to the scientific teamwork that is necessary for this type of enterprise.
“A partnership of this magnitude requires very specific capabilities, and San Antonio is the only place in the world that has all of the right ingredients,” said UTSA President Taylor Eighmy. “Making San Antonio the hub of this visionary collaboration will give scientists, researchers and health care professionals around the world access to the city’s robust bioscience enterprise, its diverse population and its military ecosystem. San Antonio is the City of the Future, and this is the partnership of the future.”
Leveraging Unique Assets
To improve health care in Texas and beyond, Texas Biomed, UTSA, UT Health San Antonio and SwRI will each contribute unique assets and expertise to the SA PPT.
A pioneer of biomedical breakthroughs, Texas Biomed is a world-leader in the science of infectious diseases and their associations with other disease states and susceptible populations. Its strengths include research programs in tuberculosis, HIV, malaria and other parasitic diseases, hepatitis and hemorrhagic viruses, aging and obesity and other complex metabolic disorders. It is home to three interdisciplinary scientific programs (Host Pathogen Interactions, Disease Intervention and Prevention, and Population Health), and is the only place in the world with both a National Primate Research Center and a privately owned animal biosafety level four maximum containment laboratory.
UT Health San Antonio, one of the nation’s leading academic health and research institutions, is home to the Mays Cancer Center, a clinical and research enterprise affiliated with the world-renowned MD Anderson Cancer Center. The Mays Cancer Center, one of only four National Cancer Institute-Designated Cancer Centers in Texas, includes the renowned Institute for Drug Development. UT Health San Antonio also features the Center for Renal Precision Medicine, the Center on Smart and Connected Healthcare Technologies, the Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases, and the Sam and Ann Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging Studies. To advance the SA PPT, UT Health San Antonio will offer nine institutional core laboratories, including those focused on mass spectrometry, lipidomics, metabolomics and X-ray crystallography as well as biobanking, high-resolution optical imaging, single-cell analyses and flow cytometry.
“The San Antonio Partnership for Precision Therapeutics is a highly innovative initiative that will uniquely leverage our combined assets and expertise to create a competitive advantage for San Antonio and elevate its biosciences ecosystem to the international stage,” said SwRI President and CEO Adam Hamilton. “With this partnership, San Antonio has the potential to revolutionize the development and delivery of therapeutics in a holistic way. This could be the model that defines health care around the world for generations to come.”
Next Steps
The SA PPT will include collaborative research project teams, overseen by a leadership council and external advisory board. A technical steering committee composed of senior technical leads from all four institutions and pharmaceutical and industry experts will guide the selection of projects and commercialization opportunities. The four founding institutions will initially contribute $200,000 each to launch SA PPT and support the initial collaborative pilot projects.
Liz Tullis has been named SA PPT Interim Operations Director. She will be responsible for establishing routines and governance, operational performance and strategic planning. More information on the San Antonio Partnership for Precision Therapeutics is available at www.sappt.org.