The House of Lords Science and Technology Committee has launched an inquiry into innovation in the NHS, with a focus on personalised medicine and AI.
The Committee will explore:
- The current state of the science underpinning personalised medicine, the major gaps and existing possibilities, including the role of AI in personalised medicine.
- What research infrastructure is needed to support the development of personalised medicine and AI in the UK.
- How effective the UK is in translating its life sciences strengths into validated personalised medicine and AI tools and what can be done to remain competitive in this field.
- How proven innovations might be deployed across the NHS, and what key systematic barriers prevent or delay this.
- If regulatory frameworks are appropriate and proportionate, and where they could be improved.
- Whether current appraisal and commissioning models are appropriate for personalised medicine.
- What the Government needs to do to strengthen feedback loops between medical research, the life sciences industry and the NHS.
The Committee’s inquiry will seek to use personalised medicine and AI as examples to examine why the NHS adoption of the UK’s cutting-edge life sciences innovations often fails, and what could be done to fix it.
The Committee invites written contributions to its inquiry by Monday 20 April 2026.
Advances in artificial intelligence and genomics offer the prospect of developing truly personalised medicine across prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Recent advances in genomics, AI-driven data analytics and biotechnology are enabling new therapies like CAR T-cell therapy, which uses modified versions of the body’s own immune system cells to fight cancer, and other gene therapies that are highly customised to patients. These therapies offer life-saving potential, but the need to tailor them to the individual can make them expensive to deploy.
Novel developments in AI, such as the development of Google’s AlphaGenome model, offer further hope that genomic medicine will advance as our ability to understand genetic effects on health improves and the data analysis for personalised medicines becomes possible to automate. There are broad ambitions to use AI more widely to advance medical science; for example, the Government’s AI for Science strategy has a target to “Use AI to accelerate drug discovery to develop trial-ready drugs within 100 days by 2030 and contribute to deploying new treatments faster.” But translating the cutting edge of medical science into routine patient delivery in the NHS remains a challenge.
Lord Mair CBE, Chair of the Committee said: “Advances in AI and genomics are creating the prospect of truly personalised medicine across prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Our inquiry will use personalised medicine as a case study to explore a broader question: why does the NHS struggle to adopt the UK’s cutting-edge life sciences innovations, and what could be done to fix that?
“As the NHS plans to harness new developments in genomics, AI, and personalised medicine, our inquiry will seek to establish the state of the science and technology in this area and understand where patients might benefit from near-term developments.”
To read the call for evidence and make a submission, visit the inquiry’s home page.