Visionary Research for Tomorrow’s Healthcare

The LOOP Zurich is a translational research center in Zurich, with a focus on precision medicine*. It combines the strength in basic research in biomedicine and bioinformatics of the two universities in Zurich, ETH Zurich and the University of Zurich, with clinical research from the city’s four university hospitals. The hospitals’ unparalleled access to patients and in-depth knowledge of their needs together with the research infrastructures at the University of Zurich and ETH will enable the implementation of novel and innovative strategies for translational research projects.

The goal of The LOOP Zurich is to improve the understanding of disease based on patient-derived material and information. Modern analytics, bioinformatics and data processing tools, capable of handling large data collections, will generate new insights into the understanding of origins and course of diseases, and thereby facilitate the development of innovative, disease-modifying therapies in order to meet the needs of individual patients efficiently and comprehensively.

 

* Under the term precision medicine we understand the customization of healthcare measures to the individual patient, or more precisely, to the specific molecular make-up linked to a pathology.

Built on Biomedical Informatics

The Loop Zürich projects will benefit from access to large patient databases and biobanks that constitute a tremendous resource of biomedical information. Correspondingly, bioinformatics including machine learning tools will play a critical role in this context.


News

The LOOP Zurich is establishing a central BioMedical Informatics Platform - The LOOP Zurich BioMedical Informatics Platform (BMI Platform). To assist in developing this platform we are seeking proposals from companies or individuals.

Inaugural Lecture Julia Vogt

Machine learning and medicine: a challenging symbiosis

Julia Vogt, professor for medical data science at the ETH Zurich, laid out the opportunities and challenges of machine learning and medicine. At The LOOP Zurich Julia Vogt is a group member of the research consortia StimuLOOP.

Can computer models support medical doctors in their decision-making processes? Yes, according to Julia Vogt. Her and her team developed several computer-based models, that have been implemented into medical practice.

The Helmut Horten Foundation celebrated its 50-year anniversary with a festive event at the ETH Zürich on the 22nd of October 2021.

Picture from left to right: Prof. Davide Rossi (IOR / EOC Bellinzona), Prof. Davide Robbiani (IRB Bellinzona), Prof. Thorsten Zenz (USZ/UZH/The LOOP Zurich), Dr. Markus Fellner (personal council to Countess Goëss-​Horten), Alain Robert (president of the Helmut Horten Stiftung) (picture: Valeriano Di Domenico)

Severe cases of COVID-19 can now be detected at an early stage. Researchers at the University of Zurich have identified the first biomarker that can reliably predict which patients will develop severe symptoms. This can help to improve the treatment of severe cases of COVID-19.

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