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Daily Archives: March 20, 2014
New DNA stool test almost as good as dreaded colonoscopy
Posted: March 20, 2014 at 9:45 am
The noninvasive test is pretty accurate at finding colon cancer -- not as good as a colonoscopy, but you can take it at home.
The new DNA stool test is currently being reviewed for approval by the FDA.
Last year alone, almost 50,000 Americans died of colon cancer, and nearly 150,000 new cases were discovered. In fact, it's the third most common cancer in the US, according to the American Cancer Society. And yet one in every three qualifying Americans doesn't follow colonoscopy guidelines: getting one at age 50 and every decade thereafter.
There may be many factors at play behind so many people not undergoing the procedure, but even for those who simply feel squeamish about it, it's hard to blame them. Colonoscopies are invasive, uncomfortable, and at least for some, downright embarrassing.
Soon, however, the millions of adults who forego the colon cancer screening test may have a noninvasive, at-home alternative: a DNA stool test. While it's not as reliable as a colonoscopy, new research published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine finds that the test, which checks for blood and abnormal DNA, is 92 percent accurate.
The test isn't yet approved by the Food and Drug Administration, and the research, which comes from the Icahn school of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, shows that it isn't perfect. "But neither is a colonoscopy," study co-author Dr. Steven Itzkowitz tells HealthDay. "I don't think we're saying that this test should be done as a replacement for a colonoscopy, but rather as an adjunct. Certainly if a person who does this test comes out with a positive reading then they will need to do a colonoscopy afterwards to confirm it."
The research, which was funded by Exact Sciences Corp., the makers of the test, screened nearly 10,000 men and women aged 50 and older for colon cancer and precancerous polyps at 90 sites across the US and Canada. They used three screening methods: the new DNA test, traditional colonoscopies, and a commercially available fecal test (FIT).
The colonoscopy found colon cancer in 65 patients and precancerous lesions in 757. The DNA test caught 60 of those 65, better than the 48 found using the FIT test. As for precancerous lesions, the stool sample tests were far less accurate -- the DNA test found only 42 percent of cases, while FIT found even fewer, just 24 percent.
The DNA test was also more likely to give false positive results than either the FIT test or a colonoscopy. Still, researchers say that testing DNA and blood in stool samples may come with benefits over colonoscopies: It was quite good at finding certain advanced-stage polyps -- ones that are flat and harder to pick up via colonoscopy.
Given the mixed findings, it's safe to say that, should the DNA stool test go to market, those who opt for it should consider following up with a colonoscopy, or at least know the risks of relying solely on the at-home test.
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Citizen Science Project Markets Test for Damaged DNA
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A new tech start-up sells test kits to the public, measures their DNA damage to simultaneously fund research and gather data
DNA damage resulting in multiple broken chromosomes Credit: Rotatebot/Wikimedia Commons
Exogen Biotechnology, a Berkeley, Calif.based tech start-up, wants more than peoples money to fund its genetic researchit also wants their DNA. But the company doesnt sequence peoples genomes, like 23andMe does. Rather, it measures the overall health of peoples genomes by counting double-strand breaks in their DNA. Exogens research project is one of the latest entrants into the burgeoning field of crowdfunded citizen science. It sells a DNA damage testing kit to consumers who send back a blood sample for analysis. To count the double-strand breaks, the company uses an automated technology that co-founder Sylvain Costes developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, which supplants the traditional, painstaking process of counting breaks by hand. As the company Web site explains, everyone has DNA damage due to aging, lifestyle and environmental exposures, which the body will often repair. But some people may have a higher risk of damage if, for example, theyre elderly smokers who like to tan on the beach. Furthermore, two people with seemingly similar risk levels may differ because individuals vary in their natural ability to repair DNA. This means some individuals may have accrued more damage than others. Based on the DNA analysis and demographic information they collect along with the test, Exogen says it can tell people where they sit on the risk continuum compared with others of similar age, lifestyle, geographic location and other factors. Costes and co-founder Jonathan Tang ultimately want to create a worldwide database with this information (although customers can opt out if they choose). They think it will inform our understanding of how health problems such as premature aging, cancer and other diseases are linked to DNA damage caused by lifestyle and environmental factors such as smoking and exposure to ionizing radiation. Because Exogen uses a rather avant-garde method for its research, as do other citizen science projects, its approach raises a fundamental question: Is it promising its customers more than its test can actually tell them about their health? Higher DNA damage may increase the risk of certain health problems, such as cancer, but scientists do not know enough yet to draw a direct causal line or reliable correlation. Whether this test result will give the individual knowledge of how to behave or what to expect in life, we dont have the slightest idea about that at the moment, says Lawrence Loeb, a DNA mutation expert at the University of Washington. And although it cant hurt if test results push someone to exercise more, smoke less or wear sunscreen, it should not give individuals with lower than average DNA damage the idea that they are bulletproof, according to Loeb. Exogen believes it has made the limitations of its test clear to people buying its kits. It is targeting quantified selfers, people who are eager to understand more about their own genetics. The test does not tell them much about their personal health for now, but Exogens owners hope that will change. They want to gather enough data from their customers to be able to spot links between DNA damage, environmental and lifestyle factors, and disease. It doesnt necessarily mean that if your DNA damage is high, youre going to get cancer, says Steve Yannone, the Principle Scientist at Exogen and researcher at Lawrence Berkeley. Thats where the research comes in. Were trying to push towards getting those types of correlations. The company hopes to eventually run its research results through the peer review process, just like a traditional study, and publish its findings in a scientific journal. If the DNA damage test turns out to be diagnostically useful, it plans to sell the technology to medical professionals rather than the public. Although Exogens owners acknowledge the lack of evidence linking DNA damage to disease, its marketing approach is somewhat less forthcoming. Its Web site does not clearly indicate that scientists have not established dependable correlations between DNA damage and disease in most people (exceptions include certain rare hereditary diseases). Instead, their site states, It is important to minimize damage to your DNA because scientists have linked DNA damage and poor repair to cancer, neurological diseases, accelerated aging and many other serious medical conditions, which the average consumer might assume means a definitive link. Their Web site is a little bit leaning towards hype, says Scott Diehl, director of the Center for Pharmacogenomics and Complex Disease Research at Rutgers University. Yet Diehl also concedes that in order to crowdfund a project, you cant be shy. These guys are pretty good. Theyre asking people to support their researchyes, theyre also quasi selling them a test, but its pretty mild compared to the other charlatans out there. Some scientists are also skeptical of Exogens unusual study methods because, like other citizen science projects, the company gathers data from customers rather than using a standardized clinical trial study setup. Yannone defended the companys credentials, however. Were not a bunch of vegetable farmers, were scientists, so we know how this works, he says. We expect our study methods to stand up in the peer review process. As with any business that analyzes peoples genetic material, privacy questions inevitably arise. Exogens privacy policy seems standard, according to Diehl, and users own their data and decide whether they want to participate in Exogens research. Users can also opt to remove all personal information from the database if they wish. If Exogen publishes its study, participants remain anonymous. Theres also the danger that companies could intentionally or accidentally leak personal genomic information to others who find it valuable, such as insurance companies, employers and advertisers. The 2008 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act has mitigated this danger to some extent. It prohibits health insurance companies and employers from discriminating based on DNA, such as denying health coverage or employment, respectively, to individuals because they have a genetic predisposition for a particular disease. Yet privacy concerns about Exogen seem pretty minor compared with other genetic sequencing businesses, at least so far. The information Exogen deals with is not as valuable as a complete genetic profile because scientists, much less advertisers and insurance companies, do not yet understand what DNA damage says about personal health, although this may change if Exogen is successful. Exogens owners think that someday a DNA damage test may be as commonplace as a cholesterol test and that it will help doctors evaluate the risk of certain diseases. And because people vary in their ability to repair their DNA, it may also tell someone whether theyre more or less at risk for some diseases when they engage in genetically damaging activities, such as smoking or baking on a sunny beach. It could also pinpoint whether a toxic exposure event, such as the recent chemical spill in Charleston, W.Va., can damage peoples DNA in a way that causes serious health problems. With over $80,000 raised from crowdfunding its obvious that many people are excited by Exogens research. It is not as apparent that they realize their contributionsboth monetary and fluidare mostly altruistic for now.
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IBM's Watson to Help Sequence Cancer DNA
Posted: at 9:44 am
IBM is teaming up with the New York Genome Center to help fight brain cancer.
The company said Wednesday that its Watson cloud computing system will be used in partnership with a New York-based genetic research center to help develop treatments for glioblastoma, the most common type of brain cancer in U.S. adults.
"Time definitely is not on your side when you have glioblastoma and that's where Watson comes in," Dr. Robert Darnell, New York Genome's president, CEO and scientific director, said at a Wednesday event announcing the deal.
Glioblastoma is an extremely aggressive form of cancer. The median survival rate is 12 to 14 months and the disease kills about 13,000 people each year.
As part of the clinical trial, New York Genome Center, a nonprofit consortium of academic, medical and industry officials, will sequence the DNA of glioblastoma patients, then use Watson to combine that data with clinical information to help determine the best way to treat each patient.
What makes Watson unique is that it isn't programed like most computers. Instead of relying on the information that's put into it, Watson learns by "reading" vast amounts of information and combining it with the results of previous work to find answers to problems. Those characteristics make Watson ideal for extremely data-heavy work in fields such as health care and finance.
The partnership also comes at a time when IBM is increasing its focus on Watson and other cloud-based software services, as it moves further away from its computer hardware roots. Earlier this year, IBM announced it would invest $1 billion to give Watson its own business division and headquarters in New York City.
John Kelly, a senior vice president and director of IBM Research, says there's a vast amount of data involved in DNA sequencing, which then must be combined with all of the clinical data involved in a particular patient's case. The resulting pool of information is so big that it's impossible for people to deal with.
"This is sort of big data on steroids," Kelly says.
Darnell says the hope is that Watson will speed up the time it takes for physicians to determine a patient's treatment plan.
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Bioinformatics Pioneer, Martin Reese, on Scaling Up Human Genome Interpretation – Video
Posted: at 9:44 am
Bioinformatics Pioneer, Martin Reese, on Scaling Up Human Genome Interpretation
Chapters: 0:40 How did you get started in bioinformatics? 3:04 What is the biggest challenge with human genome interpretation? 8:01 Diagnosing Ogden Syndrome...
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Bioinformatics Pioneer, Martin Reese, on Scaling Up Human Genome Interpretation - Video
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Genome – Logo Ident – Video
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Genome - Logo Ident
Download Link: http://bit.ly/1fH0LSY Genome is a customizable 9" logo ident, designed and animated by Kain X Theory. Every brand has an identity, and that #39;s ...
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Genome - Logo Ident - Video
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Loblolly Pine Genome is Largest Ever Sequenced
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Newswise BETHESDA, MD MARCH 20, 2014 The massive genome of the loblolly pinearound seven times bigger than the human genomeis the largest genome sequenced to date and the most complete conifer genome sequence ever published. This achievement marks the first big test of a new analysis method that can speed up genome assembly by compressing the raw sequence data 100-fold.
The draft genome is described in the March 2014 issue of the journal GENETICS and the journal Genome Biology.
Loblolly pine is the most commercially important tree species in the United States and the source of most American paper products. The tree is also being developed as a feedstock for biofuel. The genome sequence will help scientists breed improved varieties and understand the evolution and diversity of plants. But the enormous size of the pines genome had been an obstacle to sequencing efforts until recently. Its a huge genome. But the challenge isnt just collecting all the sequence data. The problem is assembling that sequence into order, said David Neale, a professor of plant sciences at the University of California, Davis, who led the loblolly pine genome project and is an author on the GENETICS and Genome Biology articles.
Modern genome sequencing methods make it relatively easy to read the individual letters in DNA, but only in short fragments. In the case of the loblolly, 16 billion separate fragments had to be fit back togethera computational puzzle called genome assembly.
We were able to assemble the human genome, but it was close to the limit of our ability; seven times bigger was just too much, said Steven Salzberg, professor of medicine and biostatistics at Johns Hopkins University, one of the directors of the loblolly genome assembly team, who was also an author on the papers.
The scale of the problem can be compared to shredding thousands of copies of the same book and then trying to read the story. You have this big pile of tiny pieces and now you have to reassemble the book, Salzberg said.
The key to the solution was using a new method to pre-process the gargantuan pile of sequence data so that it could all fit within the working memory of a single super-computer. The method, developed by researchers at the University of Maryland, compiles many overlapping fragments of sequence into much larger chunks, then throws away all the redundant information. Eliminating the redundancies leaves the computer with 100 times less sequence data to deal with.
This approach allowed the team to assemble a much more complete genome sequence than the draft assemblies of two other conifer species reported last year. The size of the pieces of consecutive sequence that we assembled are orders of magnitude larger than whats been previously published, said Neale. This will enable the loblolly to serve as a high-quality reference genome that considerably speeds along future conifer genome projects.
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Technology: The $1,000 genome
Posted: at 9:44 am
In Silicon Valley, Moore's law seems to stand on equal footing with the natural laws codified by Isaac Newton. Intel co-founder Gordon Moore's iconic observation that computing power tends to double and that its price therefore halves every 2 years has held true for nearly 50 years with only minor revision. But as an exemplar of rapid change, it is the target of playful abuse from genome researchers.
In dozens of presentations over the past few years, scientists have compared the slope of Moore's law with the swiftly dropping costs of DNA sequencing. For a while they kept pace, but since about 2007, it has not even been close. The price of sequencing an average human genome has plummeted from about US$10 million to a few thousand dollars in just six years (see Falling fast). That does not just outpace Moore's law it makes the once-powerful predictor of unbridled progress look downright sedate. And just as the easy availability of personal computers changed the world, the breakneck pace of genome-technology development has revolutionized bioscience research. It is also set to cause seismic shifts in medicine.
In the eyes of many, a fair share of the credit for this success goes to a grant scheme run by the US National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI). Officially called the Advanced Sequencing Technology awards, it is known more widely as the $1,000 and $100,000 genome programmes. Started in 2004, the scheme has awarded grants to 97 groups of academic and industrial scientists, including some at every major sequencing company.
It has encouraged mobility and cooperation among technologists, and helped to launch dozens of competing companies, staving off the stagnation that many feared would take hold after the Human Genome Project wrapped up in 2003. The major companies in the space have really changed the way people do sequencing, and it all started with the NHGRI funding, says Gina Costa, who has worked for five influential companies and is now a vice-president at Cypher Genomics, a genome-interpretation firm in San Diego, California.
The $1,000 genome programme, now close to achieving its goal, will award its final grants this year. As technology enthusiasts look to future challenges, the coming milestone raises questions about how the roughly $230-million government programme managed to achieve such success, and whether its winning formula can be applied elsewhere. It benefited from fortuitous timing and the lack of an entrenched industry. But Jeffery Schloss, director of the division of genome sciences at the NHGRI in Bethesda, Maryland, who has run the programme from its inception, says that its achievements also suggest that there are ways to navigate publicprivate partnerships successfully. One of our challenges is to figure out what is the right role for the government; to not get in the way, but feed the pipeline of private-sector technology development, he says.
The quest to sequence the first human genome was a massive undertaking. Between 1990 and the publication of a working draft in 2001, more than 200 scientists joined forces in a $3-billion effort to read the roughly 3 billion bases of DNA that comprise our genetic material (International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium Nature 409, 860921; 2001). It was a grand but sobering success. The project's advocates had said that it would reveal 'life's instruction book', but in fact it did not make it possible to interpret how the instructions encoded in DNA were transformed into biology. Understanding how DNA actually influences health and disease would require studying examples of the links between genes and biology in thousands, perhaps millions, more people.
The dominant technology at the time was Sanger sequencing, an inherently slow, labour-intensive process that works by making copies of the DNA to be sequenced that include chemically modified and fluorescently tagged versions of the molecule's building blocks. One company, Applied Biosystems in Foster City, California, provided the vast majority of the sequencers to a limited number of customers generally, large government-funded laboratories and there was little incentive for it to reinvent its core technology.
Still, researchers had seen some advances, including robots that replaced some human work and improvements in devices capable of handling small amounts of liquid. At a 2002 meeting convened by the NHGRI, scientists predicted that such developments would drive costs down at least 100-fold over the next five years. But that was not enough.
They debated what price target would make human genome sequencing routine, the kind of thing a physician might order to help diagnose a patient on a par with a magnetic resonance imaging scan. Somebody threw out, to great rolling of eyes, 'a thousand dollars', recalls Schloss.
That seemed too ambitious, given the state of the technology. The risk associated with that is not one that your normal investor is willing to spend any money on, says Eric Eisenstadt, a retired official from the US government's Defense Advanced Research Project Agency who is now a consultant in Reston, Virginia.
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In the genome of loblolly pine lies hope for better resistance to a damaging disease
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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
20-Mar-2014
Contact: C. Dana Nelson dananelson@fs.fed.us 228-832-2747 x202 USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station
U.S. Forest Service Southern Research Station (SRS) scientists co-authored the article published today in the journal Genome Biology that reports the sequencing, assembly, and annotation of the loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) genome. As the primary source of pulpwood and saw timber for the U.S. forest industry, loblolly pine is of great economic importance to the South and the nation. David Neale, professor of plant sciences at the University of California, Davis, led the loblolly pine genome project.
"The project was a huge undertaking because at 22 gigabases, the loblolly pine genome is about eight times larger than the human genome," said C. Dana Nelson, SRS Southern Institute for Forest Genetics (SIFG) project leader and research geneticist. "The group chose loblolly pine both because of its economic importance, and the knowledge gained from 60 years of breeding the species and managing millions of trees in genetic trials."
As part of the project, researchers identified a candidate for a gene involved in resistance to fusiform rust, a disease that infects southern pines. SIFG biological science technician Katherine Smith worked with John M. Davis, professor and associate director of the School of Forest Resources and Conservation at the University of Florida (UF), to compare mapped sections of the genome with sections found in loblolly specimens previously inoculated with the pathogen that causes fusiform rust.
"Fusiform rust is the most damaging disease of southern pinesand one of the most complex due to genetic interactions between the pathogen and its host," said Davis, who also serves as faculty and Executive Committee member at the UF Genetics Institute. "Genetic resistance is the only realistic way to manage the disease, which infects young trees within their first five years of growth and weakens or girdles the stem. Chemical control is expensive, impractical, and not very good for the environment."
Researchers and breeders can use the resistance genes as markers to track resistance in pine breeding populations and to guide tree planting at the stand level. "The fusiform rust pathogen has evolved to defeat some rust resistance genes in loblolly," said Nelson. "The increased molecular understanding from the loblolly genome sequencing effort provides managers with a new effective tool to determine how well seedlings will grow on a particular site."
SIFG involvement in sequencing the loblolly genome actually goes back at least two decades, when SIFG helped develop an array of resources to help speed up mapping and sequencing the loblolly pine genome and provide the ability to identify genes that influence factors such as tree growth, wood quality, stress tolerance and resistance to disease. SIFG also conserved and supplied the plant tissue used in the genome sequencing project and provided quality control on the DNA samples that were sequenced.
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IBM, New York Genome Center prep Watson prototype
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Summary: The collaboration, one of many IBM is planning to widen cognitive computing's footprint, will be the first Watson implementation for genomic research.
IBM's Watson business unit and the New York Genome Center will test a cognitive computing prototype aimed at allowing oncologists to better tailor cancer care.
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The collaboration, one of many IBM is planning to widen cognitive computing's footprint, will be the first Watson implementation for genomic research.
Under the partnership:
Ultimately, IBM wants to use the Watson prototype for a clinical study by the New York Genome Center. The software and analytics tools have been under development for the past decade at IBM Research's Computational Biology Center.
The New York Genome Center specializes in experimental design, genome sequencing, bioinformatics and the computing and data storage infrastructure to crunch the data.
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Introducing Eczema – Video
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Introducing Eczema
Eczema started with me in my young teenage years, first only a small area was affected and into my late teens spread on my face, neck an body... http://eczem...
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Introducing Eczema - Video
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