Research and Markets: Despite the Early Success Stories of Herceptin and Gleevec, Many Leaders in the Field Are Cautious About the Extent to Which Genomics Will Truly Impact Cancer Care Over the Next 10 To 15 Years
Posted on: Friday, 17 February 2006, 09:00 CST
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c33148) has announced the addition of Oncogenomics: The Future of Cancer Care to their offering.
"Oncogenomics: The Future of Cancer Care" analyzes the key advances and challenges associated with translating research efforts into successful, clinically meaningful therapeutic products. The emergence of oncogenomics promises a new era of cancer care. Over the next decade or so, biomedical researchers hope to have fully catalogued all genetic alterations associated with cancer, greatly expanding the number of "druggable" anticancer molecular targets.
Oncogenomics has already seen clinical and market success with a handful of "first-generation" oncogenomic therapeutics such as Herceptin, raising hope and expectations that safer and more effective patient-selected targeted therapeutics will revolutionize cancer therapy and transform cancer into a manageable chronic disease. While patient-selected genomic-based therapy has only recently emerged as a viable clinical practice, many experts argue that it will become crucial not just in clinical practice but as an integral component of targeted drug development.
However, despite the early success stories of Herceptin and Gleevec, many leaders in the field are cautious about the extent to which genomics will truly impact cancer care over the next 10 to 15 years. Employing the right tools, technologies, and strategies will be crucial to realizing the clinical and marketplace opportunities stemming from the burgeoning growth of oncogenomics. "Oncogenomics: The Future of Cancer Care" offers insightful evaluation of the following key challenges to achieving this goal and examines current approaches to addressing these issues:
-- Preclinical drug candidate screening needs to be more predictive in order to increase the chance that a targeted drug entering clinical trials will succeed.
-- Patient selection needs to be integrated into targeted drug development and clinical practice.
-- Many pharmaceutical companies remain resistant to the patient-selected targeted drug model.
-- Not all of the targets yielded by the Human Genome Project are "druggable" and it is extremely difficult to determine which genes associated with cancer are consequences, not causes, of cancer.
-- Most tumors involve multiple mutations, which could translate into multiple pathways.
This report also:
-- Evaluates important questions about the potential medical and revenue benefits of targeted cancer drugs that are not being realized.
-- Provides an overview of the early success stories of patient-selected targeted therapeutics and highlights promising targeted therapeutics in development.
-- Explores the scientific arguments for patient-selected clinical development, discusses the disincentives and challenges to patient-selected therapy, and examines the economics of patient-selected trials.
-- Highlights key technologies used to discover cancer-associated genetic variation and gene expression patterns, and discusses the way in which the tools and technologies advanced by the HGP have improved this discovery process. Some of the key in vitro and animal model technologies being used to functionally test and "validate" (i.e., preclinically) these discoveries are summarized.
Topics covered:
-- Cancer as a Genetic Disease
-- Targeted Therapies: Early Success Stories and Promising Candidates
-- Toward Targeted Therapies: Preclinical Discovery Technology
-- Patient-Selected Targeted Drugs in the Clinic: Opportunities and Challenges
-- The Business of Oncogenomics: Challenges and Opportunities
-- Expert Interviews
Company Profiles
-- Abgenix, Inc.
-- ArtisOptimus, Inc.
-- Dendreon Corporation
-- Genomic Health, Inc.
-- ImClone Systems, Inc.
-- Medarex, Inc.
-- OncoMethylome Sciences, Inc.
-- Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
-- OSI Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
-- Spectral Genomics, Inc.
-- Vivo Biosciences, Inc.
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c33148
Source: Business Wire
Related Articles
- MacroGenics and Lilly Achieve Targeted Patient Enrollment in PROTEGE, a Global Phase 2/3 Clinical Trial of Teplizumab in Type 1 Diabetes
- Cancer Center of South Florida Selects IntrinsiQ's Clinical Software
- Identify Which Targeting Strategies Are At Work Within Antiangiogenic Drug Developments
- Mayo Clinic Study Shows Drug Could Effectively Treat, Prevent the Spread of Breast Cancer
- Medivation Announces Treatment of First Patient in Phase 1-2 Clinical Trial of MDV3100 in Hormone-Refractory Prostate Cancer
- Bethesda Memorial Hospital Selects Eclipsys Sunrise Critical Care(TM) to Help Improve Patient-Care Outcomes in High-Acuity Care Setting
- Delaware Cancer Patients Among Nation's First to Benefit From Expansion of the American Cancer Society's 'Patient Navigator Program'
- Amarin Completes Target Patient Enrollment in North American Phase III Trial of Miraxion(TM) in Huntington's Disease
- MedImmune Begins Dosing of Lupus Patients in Phase 1 Clinical Trial
- Cytotoxic Treatments Play a Critical Role in Modern Cancer Therapy - Target-Based Approaches for Discovering Novel Oncology Drugs
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds