4.6 Article

Interdisciplinary Education to Integrate Pathology and Epidemiology: Towards Molecular and Population-Level Health Science

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 176, Issue 8, Pages 659-667

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kws226

Keywords

education; public health professional; health care reform; individualized medicine; interdisciplinary communication; molecular epidemiology; pathology

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA151993, K23 AI072033, P01 CA87969, P01 CA55075]
  2. Intramural Research Program of the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health

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In recent decades, epidemiology, public health, and medical sciences have been increasingly compartmentalized into narrower disciplines. The authors recognize the value of integration of divergent scientific fields in order to create new methods, concepts, paradigms, and knowledge. Herein they describe the recent emergence of molecular pathological epidemiology (MPE), which represents an integration of population and molecular biologic science to gain insights into the etiologies, pathogenesis, evolution, and outcomes of complex multifactorial diseases. Most human diseases, including common cancers (such as breast, lung, prostate, and colorectal cancers, leukemia, and lymphoma) and other chronic diseases (such as diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, autoimmune diseases, psychiatric diseases, and some infectious diseases), are caused by alterations in the genome, epigenome, transcriptome, proteome, metabolome, microbiome, and interactome of all of the above components. In this era of personalized medicine and personalized prevention, we need integrated science (such as MPE) which can decipher diseases at the molecular, genetic, cellular, and population levels simultaneously. The authors believe that convergence and integration of multiple disciplines should be commonplace in research and education. We need to be open-minded and flexible in designing integrated education curricula and training programs for future students, clinicians, practitioners, and investigators.

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