TY - JOUR
T1 - Societal challenges of precision medicine
T2 - Bringing order to chaos
AU - on behalf of
AU - the IBCD-Faculty
AU - Salgado, Roberto
AU - Moore, Helen
AU - Martens, John W.M.
AU - Lively, Tracy
AU - Malik, Shakun
AU - McDermott, Ultan
AU - Michiels, Stefan
AU - Moscow, Jeffrey A.
AU - Tejpar, Sabine
AU - McKee, Tawnya
AU - Lacombe, Denis
AU - Becker, Robert
AU - Beer, Philip
AU - Bergh, Jonas
AU - Bogaerts, Jan
AU - Dovedi, Simon
AU - Fojo, Antonio T.
AU - Gerstung, Moritz
AU - Golfinopoulos, Vassilis
AU - Hewitt, Stephen
AU - Hochhauser, Daniel
AU - Juhl, Hartmut
AU - Kinders, Robert
AU - Lillie, Thomas
AU - Herbert, Kim Lyerly
AU - Maheswaran, Shyamala
AU - Mesri, Mehdi
AU - Nagai, Sumimasa
AU - Norstedt, Irene
AU - O'Connor, Daniel
AU - Oliver, Kathy
AU - Oyen, Wim J.G.
AU - Pignatti, Francesco
AU - Polley, Eric
AU - Rosenfeld, Nitzan
AU - Schellens, Jan
AU - Schilsky, Richard
AU - Schneider, Erasmus
AU - Senderowicz, Adrian
AU - Tenhunen, Olli
AU - van Dongen, Augustinus
AU - Vietz, Christine
AU - Wilking, Nils
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2017/10/1
Y1 - 2017/10/1
N2 - The increasing number of drugs targeting specific proteins implicated in tumourigenesis and the commercial promotion of relatively affordable genome-wide analyses has led to an increasing expectation among patients with cancer that they can now receive effective personalised treatment based on the often complex genomic signature of their tumour. For such approaches to work in routine practice, the development of correspondingly complex biomarker assays through an appropriate and rigorous regulatory framework will be required. It is becoming increasingly evident that a re-engineering of clinical research is necessary so that regulatory considerations and procedures facilitate the efficient translation of these required biomarker assays from the discovery setting through to clinical application. This article discusses the practical requirements and challenges of developing such new precision medicine strategies, based on leveraging complex genomic profiles, as discussed at the Innovation and Biomarkers in Cancer Drug Development meeting (8th–9th September 2016, Brussels, Belgium).
AB - The increasing number of drugs targeting specific proteins implicated in tumourigenesis and the commercial promotion of relatively affordable genome-wide analyses has led to an increasing expectation among patients with cancer that they can now receive effective personalised treatment based on the often complex genomic signature of their tumour. For such approaches to work in routine practice, the development of correspondingly complex biomarker assays through an appropriate and rigorous regulatory framework will be required. It is becoming increasingly evident that a re-engineering of clinical research is necessary so that regulatory considerations and procedures facilitate the efficient translation of these required biomarker assays from the discovery setting through to clinical application. This article discusses the practical requirements and challenges of developing such new precision medicine strategies, based on leveraging complex genomic profiles, as discussed at the Innovation and Biomarkers in Cancer Drug Development meeting (8th–9th September 2016, Brussels, Belgium).
KW - Assay validation
KW - Biomarkers
KW - Drug development
KW - Preanalytical and analytical validation
KW - Precision oncology
KW - Regulatory sciences
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85028944052&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ejca.2017.07.028
DO - 10.1016/j.ejca.2017.07.028
M3 - Article
C2 - 28865260
AN - SCOPUS:85028944052
SN - 0959-8049
VL - 84
SP - 325
EP - 334
JO - European Journal of Cancer
JF - European Journal of Cancer
ER -