• Cancer Survivor on N-of-One Direct-to-Patient Ombudsman Model

    Bio-IT World | The long-term success of cancer informatics company N-of-One will be shaped by its newly appointed CEO, strategic partnerships with companies like Foundation Medicine, and ultimately the experiences of cancer patients such as Elaine Waples. 

    May 31, 2012
  • The Human Protein Atlas at the GoldLab Symposium

    Bio-IT World | BOULDER, CO—Larry Gold, the founder and CEO of protein biomarker company SomaLogic, hosted a diverse and engaging group of speakers for the third annual GoldLab Symposium* on the future of health care and personalized medicine earlier this month. “Technology is only the penultimate step in successful innovation,” he said. 

    May 30, 2012
  • Ensemble, Genentech Development Collaboration

    Mass High Tech | Ensemble Therapeutics and Genentech are collaborating on macrocyclic drug candidates against targets identified by Genentech. The companies will use the Ensemblin collection of macrocycles and Ensemble's proprietary drug discovery platform. 

    May 30, 2012
  • GSK Steps Up Bid for Human Genome Sciences

    CNBC | GlaxoSmithKline is hoping to replace the board of Human Genome Sciences with its own representatives, reaching out to executives who could be nominated as "independent" directors. 

    May 30, 2012
  • Foundation Medicine Announces First Genomic Profile for Patient Treatment

    Bio-IT World | Foundation Medicine has announced the commercial launch of FoundationOne, the first pan-cancer, fully informative genomic profile designed to help oncologists expand their patients’ treatment options. 

    May 30, 2012
  • Computer-Aided Drug Design

    Texas Advanced Computing Center | Drug discovery with 3D help may be a lot more efficient than traditional methods. Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin's Computational Visualization Center have attacked each step of the drug discovery process. 

    May 29, 2012
  • Immunogenomics Conference

    Nature | The HudsonAlpha Institute in Huntsville, Ala. is hosting a conference covering immunology, genomics, bioinformatics, and clinical interactions. 

    May 29, 2012
  • PCORI’s Research Agenda is Broad, Cost-Neutral

    eCliniqua | The role of cost and patients in comparative effectiveness research (CER) were among the themes of a Post-Approval Summit held earlier this month at Harvard Medical School*. So, too, was the agenda and funding priorities of the latest actor in the CER arena: the independent, multi-stakeholder Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI). 

    May 29, 2012
  • 23andMe Announces First Patent

    The Spittoon | 23andMe CEO and co-founder Anne Wojcicki has announced the company's first patent, expected today: “Polymorphisms Related to Parkinson’s Disease.” The patent relates to the company's discovery of a variant in the SGK1 gene that may be protective against individuals at high risk of Parkinson's thanks to the rare LRRK2 G2019S mutation. 

    May 29, 2012
  • Whole Genome Sequencing Sheds Light on Hepatitis Virus Integration in Cancer Genome

    Bio-IT World | Researchers focusing on Asian cancers have used whole-genome sequencing to study the level of hepatitis B virus integration in the genomes of cancer patients and to discover three novel genes associated with recurrent hepatitis B virus integration in hepatocellular carcinoma. The study was published today in Nature Genetics

    May 29, 2012
  • May 2012 New Products

    Bio-IT World | A summary of the new products in bio-IT released in the past month including NGS sample prep, cloud storage-as-a-service, clinical trial document management, and more. 

    May 28, 2012
  • Antipsychotic Shows Anticancer Activity

    Winnipeg Free Press | Canadian researchers screened about 3,000 compounds looking for those that would selectively inhibit cancer stem cells. Of the 20 promising results, one was the antipsychotic drug thioridazine. 

    May 25, 2012
  • Singapore Fellowship Offers Up To $2.4m to Individual Researcher

    Bio-IT World | The Singapore National Research Foundation (NRF) Fellowship has released the call for applicants for the sixth annual Singapore NRF Fellowship. The fellowship consists of a five-year research grant of up to $2.4 million to an individual, for research undertaken in Singapore. Fellowship proposals are due by August 15, 2012. 

    May 24, 2012
  • Amgen Revives Drug Thanks to Biomarker Data

    Bloomberg | In light of a small set of data, Amgen is reviving its gastric cancer drug rilotumumab that seems to show efficacy for patients with high levels of c-Met, a protein linked to cancer growth. The revival is a win for personalized medicine. 

    May 23, 2012
  • Ra Pharmaceuticals Launches Protein-Like Drugs

    Xconomy | Ra Pharmaceuticals is announcing its technology platform to develop protein-like molecules that it calls Cyclomimetrics. The technology was licensed from Uppsala University in Sweden, and makes large molecules that can be made into pills. 

    May 23, 2012
  • Personalized Genetic Testing Only for 'Clinical Trial Setting'

    CNN | The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists released its recommendation this week that personalized genetic tests be only used in a clinical trial setting, saying the tests are not "ready for prime time." 

    May 23, 2012
  • Ring My BEL: Selventa Releases Biological Expression Language

    Bio-IT World | With a recent rebranding and evolving business model, Selventa—the company formerly known as Genstruct—has decided to release a key knowledge engineering asset to the scientific community. 

    May 23, 2012
  • Big Trial Starting for Genentech's Alzheimer's Drug

    New York Times | Genentech's new Alzheimer's drug trial will test the drug on 200 patients with a genetic mutation for early-onset disease (with half receiving placebo) and another 100 family members without the mutation. 

    May 23, 2012
  • Spectra Logic Tape Storage Beefs Up NCSA Blue Waters Supercomputer

    Bio-IT World | The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) has selected T-Finity tape libraries from Boulder, CO-based Spectra Logic to provide hundreds of petabytes of data storage for its upcoming Blue Waters supercomputing system, one of the most powerful supercomputing systems in the world. 

    May 21, 2012
  • Building Electronic Clinical Trials is Grueling and Slow—Recent Survey

    eCliniqua | The tedious process of building an electronic clinical trial is a stubborn bottleneck requiring too much time and too many resources. Those are the topline results of a 2011 survey conducted at two annual meetings—the Drug Information Association (DIA) and the Society for Clinical Data Management (SCDM). Cmed Technology, a UK-based provider of eClinical solutions developed and administered the survey, which resulted in 87 respondents from 55 companies.

    May 21, 2012