We use genomics to improve health for everyone.

About the Partnership

Genomics-driven personalised care is an incredible opportunity to create better patient outcomes and a more equitable and efficient health care system.

Illumina and the University of Melbourne have come together to offer scalable next-generation sequencing, combining research and biomedical industry expertise to move genomics beyond the lab into routine clinical care.

Together, we are working to accelerate the translation of biomedical research, making genomics more affordable and accessible to improve health for everyone.

What we’ve achieved

TAGC brings together the best researchers, health economists, and industry experts to create world-leading biomedical projects.

With the support of Invest Victoria, we established a flagship $60 million hub inside the Melbourne Biomedical Precinct known as The Advanced Genomics Collaboration (TAGC). Here’s what we’ve achieved so far:

Supporting 11 clinical trials and multiple major studies

  • Including the $5 million MRFF funded SUPER-NEXT study, using genomics to provide clearer diagnosis and targeted, personalised treatment options for patients with cancer of unknown primary origin.

$30 million+ in leveraged funding

  • Including $1.9 million for the VCCC Precision Oncology Program, to support availability of a comprehensive toolbox of genomic and molecular tests for clinicians to ensure the right cancer patient receives the right treatment.
  • $3.5 million NHMRC grant to develop the ID-Predict platform to target T cell differentiation and function to treat cancer.

More than 60 new jobs created

  • Including research fellows, curation scientists, bioinformaticians, genomics assistants, and postdoctoral scientists. Building vital knowledge and infrastructure to enable greater levels of genomics research and clinical trials throughout the Parkville Biomedical Precinct.

More than 1250 patients sequenced

  • Including over 845 patients sequenced in real-time through Professor Sean Grimmond’s COLUMN Initiative, focusing on rare or aggressive tumours, including cancers that are resistant to standard therapies and difficult to diagnose cases.

50+ student internships and graduate research placements

  • Equipping the next generation of researchers with the skills to lead the genomics revolution.

The Core Enabling Platforms

At its heart, The Advanced Genomics Collaboration has three core platforms. These platforms have been established to enable fast and affordable research, analysis, trial, commercialisation and application of genomics based health innovation at both global quality and scale.

The Bioinformatics Platform
The Bioinformatics Platform
TAGC's Bioinformatics Platform is a cloud-based system that enables the creation, storage and interrogation of national and global-scale genomic datasets.
The Health Economics Platform
The Health Economics Platform
TAGC's Health Economics Platform uses analysis of TAGC's national and global-scale genomic datasets to provide evidence-based guidance for public policy and investment.
The Clinical Genomics Platform
The Clinical Genomics Platform
TAGC's Clinical Genomics Platform delivers rapid, affordable sequencing of whole genomes on a scale that provides timely insight for every collaborating researcher and clinician.

We're working to increase genomics innovation and its translation and adoption into the health system to improve patient outcomes.

The Need

Fifteen years ago, the first ever genome sequencing project carried out on humans was completed. The Human Genome Project took more than 13 years, cost more than $3 billion and drew on efforts from scientists and non-scientists around the world.

Since then, the entire landscape of genome sequencing has evolved. The genomics market is projected to double to USD $35.7 billion by 2024, revolutionising biomedical research and medical practice.

Genomics technology is relatively new and disruptive in healthcare. Its successful implementation relies on whole-of-system change. Through the possibilities of rapid diagnosis, early intervention, prevention and targeted therapy, genomic medicine has the potential to transform how we deliver healthcare, promising better patient outcomes and a more efficient health system.

In the next five years, the health care system is expected to generate genomic data from an estimated 60 million global patients. The volume and complexity of that data – and how it is accessed, shared and applied – are enormous. So too are the associated issues around genomic medicine such as data storage, ethics and privacy, nationally-consistent practices, patient access, economic impact and workforce capability.

The formation of TAGC establishes the Melbourne Biomedical Precinct's place on the international stage, to realise a future where genomics enables precision medicine through innovations in molecular diagnostics, the development of targeted breakthrough therapies and disease prevention.

The Advanced Genomics Collaboration

Publications

TAGC’s core enabling platforms and innovation projects have supported multiple publications, contributing to world-leading medical and scientific research.

Building the infrastructure required to research novel therapies for 35% of women with endometrial cancer who have rare subtypes
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RAF1 rearrangements are common in pancreatic acinar cell carcinomas
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Cost Effectiveness of Molecular Diagnostic Testing Algorithms for the Treatment Selection of Frontline Ibrutinib for Patients with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia in Australia
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EE141 Cost-Effectiveness of TP53 and IGHV Biomarker Testing Prior to First-Line Treatment With Novel Agents for Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
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Health economic evidence for the use of molecular biomarker tests in hematological malignancies: A systematic review
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Media

The TAGC partnership has received more than 250 media mentions, promoting genomics as an incredible opportunity to transform patient outcomes and create substantial efficiencies for the healthcare system.

Victoria’s recovery boost for unis
The Australian
24
 
March 2021
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Australia harnesses the power of genomics to track SARS-CoV-2 infections within communities
BioWorld
28
 
December 2020
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Genomics giant Illumina hopes to help launch 'bona fide' biotechs
The Age
8
 
December 2020
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Melbourne to be home to nation’s first genomics hub
Herald Sun
4
 
December 2020
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Genomics innovation hub to drive research and clinical impact
University of Melbourne
4
 
December 2020
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Resources