Elsevier

Neoplasia

Volume 13, Issue 9, September 2011, Pages 771-783
Neoplasia

G-DOC: A Systems Medicine Platform for Personalized Oncology1

https://doi.org/10.1593/neo.11806Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Currently, cancer therapy remains limited by a “one-size-fits-all” approach, whereby treatment decisions are based mainly on the clinical stage of disease, yet fail to reference the individual's underlying biology and its role driving malignancy. Identifying better personalized therapies for cancer treatment is hindered by the lack of high-quality “omics” data of sufficient size to produce meaningful results and the ability to integrate biomedical data from disparate technologies. Resolving these issues will help translation of therapies from research to clinic by helping clinicians develop patient-specific treatments based on the unique signatures of patient's tumor. Here we describe the Georgetown Database of Cancer (G-DOC), a Web platform that enables basic and clinical research by integrating patient characteristics and clinical outcome data with a variety of high-throughput research data in a unified environment. While several rich data repositories for high-dimensional research data exist in the public domain, most focus on a single-data type and do not support integration across multiple technologies. Currently, G-DOC contains data from more than 2500 breast cancer patients and 800 gastrointestinal cancer patients, G-DOC includes a broad collection of bioinformatics and systems biology tools for analysis and visualization of four major “omics” types: DNA, mRNA, microRNA, and metabolites. We believe that G-DOC will help facilitate systems medicine by providing identification of trends and patterns in integrated data sets and hence facilitate the use of better targeted therapies for cancer. A set of representative usage scenarios is provided to highlight the technical capabilities of this resource.

Abbreviations

CIN
chromosomal instability
CRC
colorectal cancer
dbSNP
the single nucleotide polymorphism database at the NCBI
G-DOC
Georgetown Database of Cancer
GI
gastrointestinal
miRNAs
microRNAs
OMIM
Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man
PCA
principal component analysis

Cited by (0)

1

The G-DOC development effort was partly funded by the National Cancer Institute's In Silico Centers of Excellence Program (HHSN261200800001E) as well as the Center for Cancer Systems Biology (U54-CA149147).

2

These authors equally contributed to this study.