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Creating a new paradigm for cancer-based clinical trials by leveraging clinical and molecular data
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Cancer Science & Therapy

ISSN: 1948-5956

Open Access

Creating a new paradigm for cancer-based clinical trials by leveraging clinical and molecular data


3rd World Congress on Cancer Science & Therapy

October 21-23, 2013 DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel San Francisco Airport, CA, USA

David A. Fenstermacher

ScientificTracks: J Cancer Sci Ther

Abstract :

This lecture will address a variety of topics related to the development of molecular biomarkers for cancer therapeutics and the use of clinical data to target patient accrual to biomarker-based clinical trials. A prospective longitudinal study, Total Cancer Care currently underway at the Moffitt Cancer Center, has been used to accrue more than 96,000 patients for the creation of a comprehensive data warehouse that is able to integrate clinical and molecular data that is being used for in silico clinical trial design in solid tumor malignancies to match patients with novel therapeutics through collaborations with the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry. The studies presented will provide insights to the challenges to use point-of-care clinical data and research-grade molecular data to aid in the design of clinical trials that more precisely align patients with new therapeutics currently in development. In addition, the informatics infrastructure that supports both clinical trials design and cohort surveillance will be discussed along with how this infrastructure is being expanded into a Research Information Exchange to provide a data sharing framework, creating a multi-institutional network that can be leveraged on both a national and global scale.

Biography :

David A. Fenstermacher is the chief research information officer at the Virginia Commonwealth University. He is the former founding chair of the Department of Biomedical Informatics at the Moffitt Cancer Center and the chief bioinformatics officer for M2Gen. He received his doctoral degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. During his fourteen years in biomedical informatics, he has designed and directed the implementation of several biomedical informatics distributed computing systems to support multiple institutional translational research projects. He currently serves on the editorial board for Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine.

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 3968

Cancer Science & Therapy received 3968 citations as per Google Scholar report

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