Pharmacogenomics and Personalized Medicine: Shaping the Future of Drug

Dr. Abeer Mansour Abdel Rasool
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy, Nineveh University, Nineveh, Iraq.

Ahmed Ibrahim Younis
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy, Nineveh University, Nineveh, Iraq.

SKU: PPMSFD Category: Tag:

Book Details

Author(s)

Dr. Abeer Mansour Abdel Rasool
Ahmed Ibrahim Younis

Pages

266

Publisher

BP International

Language

English

ISBN-13 (15)

978-81-999106-9-0 (Print)
978-81-999106-1-4 (eBook)

Published

February 16, 2026

About The Author / Editor

Ahmed Ibrahim Younis

Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy, Nineveh University, Nineveh, Iraq.

Dr. Abeer Mansour Abdel Rasool

Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy, Nineveh University, Nineveh, Iraq.

One thing is becoming quite clear in the constantly changing world of modern medicine: the future of healthcare depends on acknowledging that each patient is unique. Because of genetic differences, no two people will react to the same medicine in the same way. This comprehension is essential to pharmacogenomics, the discipline that integrates human genetics with pharmacology to create more intelligent, safer, and more efficacious medications.

The authors of the book “Pharmacogenomics and Personalized Medicine: Shaping the Future of Drug Therapy” strongly believe that using genetic research in clinical practice is both an ethical and medical necessity, not just an academic exercise. It looks like we’re about to enter a new era where individualized care is possible because to the tremendous growth of DNA sequencing, bioinformatics, and molecular diagnostics.

Throughout this work, I have tried to show that pharmacogenomics is not only a subject of research but a movement that is changing how drugs are discovered, prescribed, and monitored. The next chapters go into more detail about the scientific basis, practical applications, technical progress, and moral issues surrounding personalized medicine. Each section tries to make sophisticated genomic ideas easier to understand and more relevant to real life by connecting the molecular level of gene-drug interactions to the experiences of patients and doctors.

This book is for you if you are a student, healthcare provider, or researcher who feels precision medicine is possible. It says its mission is to get the next generation of doctors and nurses to perceive each patient as a unique person, leverage the potential of the human genome in their work, and push the limits of traditional pharmacology.

Finally, our endeavor is a small step toward an international conversation that urges us to mix data with people, technology with morals, and science with compassion. taking will take a long time before entirely personalized treatment is the norm, but the journey there is worth taking since it will lead to a day when healthcare is both effective and very personal.