From the winner, the award from 2025 David Liu to the president of Moderna Stepháne Bancel, wired health speakers gave a deep insight into the gene edition, cancer treatment and many other most up-to-date topics. We were also joined by a neurosurgeon and the main medical correspondent of CNN Sanjay Gupta, who discussed chronic pain and his novel book, It doesn’t have to hurt: your intelligent guide to a painless life.
Another wired health event will take place April 17 in London. In the meantime, let us catch our peak in Boston below.
Improving genetic errors with CRISPR
Treatment of genetic diseases such as sickle -out and beta thalesia is hard to design, but ongoing CRISPR clinical trials offer patients novel hope. Wired Editor managing Hemal Jhaveri talked to the winner of the Breakthrough Award Award in the field of life David Liu to discuss how novel genetic edition tools can fix pathogenic gene mutations that cause thousands of diseases.
Brain formation on a computer
Over the past two decades of the neuronauklac Mit Ed Bayden invented novel tools for mapping and brain control. Now he is building the world’s first computer simulation. In this wired health speech, he talked about how this invention can revolutionize artificial intelligence, unlock novel neurodiseaseasesease treatment, and even lend a hand better understand human condition.
The creation of Agetech
From digital brain training to screening devices at home, technology transforms, as and where people aged 50 and more live, managing such conditions such as dementia and chronic diseases. The general director of Aarp Myechia Minter-Jordan talked to the wired editor-in-chief Brian Barrett about the promise of Agetech, the developing longevity economy and about how to start innovations to lend a hand us develop as aging.
The promise of sequencing the entire genome
National sequencing projects of the entire genome are launched by governments around the world, from Great Britain to the United Arab Emirates. Harvard geneticist George Church and founder and general director Orchid Noor Siddiqui talked to the wired writer Emily Mullin about how the sequencing of the entire genome is used to prevent genetic diseases.
Using lightweight to treat cancer, mental illness and many more
In this speech was the technical director of Google and Facebook Mary Lou Jepsen-Teraz, chairwoman and founder of OpenWater-Born, an exclusive view of her novel invention: a portable modular device designed to combine ultrasound, holography and the most up-to-date physics to kill cancer cancer and other diseases with precision.
Winning the war with cancer
Care of cancer is still based on ponderous, high-priced procedures developed decades ago. Liquid biopsies change, which – repeating CT scans and surgical biopsies with one blood test, which can detect cancer at an early stage and accelerate treatment. Helmy Eltooukha, co -founder and general director of Guardant Health, sat down with a wired health curator João Medeiros to discuss how precise oncology transforms the experience of patients with cancer and how polished biopsies will soon be part of routine healthcare.
Revolution of anti -cancer vaccine
What next for the company that has developed the MRNA Covid-19 vaccine in a record time? Stéphane Bancel, General Director of Moderna, talked with Brian Barrett from Wired about the thrilling work of a biotechnology company over individualized MRNA cancer therapies and other promising treatment of cancer in developing. Bancel also reacted to the recent rhetoric of Trump’s administration.
It doesn’t have to hurt: conversation with Sanjay Gupta
Over 52 million people around the world suffer from everyday chronic pain. The main medical correspondent of CNN and the award -winning neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta joined the Health Superintendent Wired João Medeiros to talk about his novel book and the best supported teachings of pain methods.
