PARIS - Thursday, July 25th 2013 [ME NewsWire]
WIN Symposium
(BUSINESS
WIRE)-- 400 delegates from around the globe attended the fifth WIN
Symposium, held in Paris, July 10-12. This year’s overarching theme was
“Personalized Cancer Therapy: From Innovation to Implementation”. Thirty
experts from academia, pharma, diagnostics, bio-informatics companies,
and regulatory agencies presented and discussed their views on how new
genomic and proteomic technologies and new targeted therapies affect the
way individual cancer patients are treated, as well as the hurdles for
implementation of personalized cancer therapy in innovative clinical
trials and daily practice.
Individual patients’ tumors are
usually driven by a combination of aberrant genes and their gene
products, often encompassing mutated or re-arranged genes. The
combinations of oncogenic drivers frequently differ between patients
having tumors of the same histology and even within the same patient at
different time points. Several presenters pointed to the trend of
increasing reliance on biomarkers and molecular diagnostics to detect
and assess genetic aberrations in tumor tissue. Some of these tests,
which usually test for a single abnormality, have already demonstrated
their value for the prognosis of patients with cancer and the
identification upfront of patients who are likely or less likely to
respond to a certain therapy, including several targeted therapies for
colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and melanoma. It is likely that
further fragmentation of such histologically defined tumor types along
genetic/proteomic lines will occur, similar to what is happening in
non-small cell lung cancer. More “actionable” genetic aberrations than
currently exploited are on the horizon.
These availability of
rapidly increasing numbers or targeted agents, validated biomarkers and
molecular diagnostics, and the emergence of whole-genome sequencing as a
new tool, increase the complexity of cancer diagnosis, prognosis and
treatment, as Dr. Richard L. Schilsky, Chairman of WIN Consortium’s
Scientific Advisory Board, pointed out in his concluding remarks. With
the implementation in trials and daily practice of increasing numbers of
diagnostic tests of increasing complexity, massive amounts of data will
need to be processed to provide decision support to patients and
treating physicians. Several bio-informatics companies and organizations
have therefore entered the cancer arena to address the issues in
bio-informatics in oncology.
Webcasts WIN Symposium on www.winsymposium.org Videos on http://ecancer.org/conference/videos/328-win-symposium-2013.php
The next WIN Symposium is scheduled to take place in Paris, June 23-24, 2014.
www.winconsortium.org
Contacts
WIN:
Catherine Bresson, Phone: 33 1 42 11 4020
Director of Operational Team
Catherine.Bresson@winconsortium.org
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