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Goals and Objectives
- Our goal is to improve the efficacy of anticancer drugs by elucidating the
impact and mechanisms of germline polymorphisms affecting the pharmacokinetics
and pharmacodynamics of anticancer agents. Our aims include:
- (1) To enhance pharmacogenetic knowledge and deposition in PharmGKB through (a) identification
of new polymorphisms in drug metabolizing enzymes, transporters, or targets
relevant to anticancer agents, (b) detailed analysis of the haplotypic structure
and population diversity of important candidate genes, (c) determination of the
association between newly discovered and previously identified polymorphisms and
haplotypes (genotype) and variability in toxicity and/or response to anticancer
agents (phenotype), and (d) collaboration and interaction with other PGRN investigators
and the NCI-funded Cooperative Groups;
- (2) To create shared resources of value for other PGRN investigators and users of PharmGKB; and
- (3) To demonstrate the clinical
utility of pharmacogenetic knowledge.
- Our group has demonstrated substantial productivity as evidenced by multiple publications and
data deposits. Our scientific plans include a
consistent phenotype-to-genotype approach and are organized around four Projects (childhood leukemia,
colorectal cancer, CYP3A and related genes, cellular susceptibility) and five Cores (Administrative,
Study Design and Data Analysis, Molecular Genetics, Liver Tissue, Cell Line). Our objective is to
define how genetic variability impacts phenotypic variability in anticancer drug response, with the
long-term aspiration that individualization of therapy, based on genomics, will improve efficacy and
decrease adverse effects of anticancer agents.
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