ANN ARBOR – Genomenon announced a $1.8 milion grant awarded by the National Institutes of Health will fund Genomenon’s further innovation in genomic analysis, streamlining the literature research and curation process leading to faster patient diagnosis.

“This grant recognizes the solid approach and great potential of Genomenon’s technology to drive rapid improvements in automating accurate gene and variant curation,” said Genomenon co- founder and CSO Dr. Mark Kiel.

Genomenon’s initial product, Mastermind, is an analytic and data visualization tool that accelerates gene and variant curation by providing immediate insight into millions of scientific articles from the primary medical literature. The grant will help Genomenon in its quest to assemble the most comprehensive database of genomic knowledge ever created by expanding its Mastermind database with millions of additional articles covering genetic disease.

The funds for Phase I of this grant will be used to perform concordance testing between the Mastermind database and current gold-standard references of genomic knowledge. Phase II will focus on refining various applications using the Mastermind database including the development of ancillary software to inform patient diagnosis and research discovery.

Genomenon recently announced the completion of its latest financing round in the 4th quarter of 2016. The financing fueled the completion and launch of Mastermind, which was officially released in February.

Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R44HG009474. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

For more information, visit www.genomenon.com