The March 30-31 meeting of the IOM Omics committee
was largely devoted to a series of presentations from
outside experts dealing with
1. basic science,
2. case studies, and
3. the relative roles of investigators, journals, institutions
and agencies.
The full agenda for the meeting sessions open to the public is here.
1. Session Introduction (by Gil Omenn, chair), Larry Kessler
overview of scientific bases for omics tests,
Ned Calogne on
lessons from the Evaluation of Genomic Applications in
Practice and Prevention (EGAPP). 49 min, 24 sec; 45.2 Mb
2. Rich Simon on
the Use of Archived Tissues in the Development
and validation of Prognostic and Predictive Biomarkers.
33 min, 2 sec; 30.2 Mb
3. Chuck Perou on
Analytical variation of tests and cross-platform
test validation. 33 min, 24 sec; 30.6 Mb
4. Sumithra Mandrekar on
Clinical trial design and discussion
of the four talks in this session. 1 hr, 16 min, 48 sec; 70.3 Mb
5. Peter Pronovost on
Institutional Responsibility, and discussion.
47 min, 50 sec; 43.8 Mb
6. Laura van't Veer on
MammaPrint. 44 min, 9 sec; 40.4 Mb
7. Steve Shak on
Oncotype Dx, and discussion of the two talks
in this session. 1 hr, 12 min, 1 sec; 65.9 Mb
8. Joseph Nevins on
the Duke University Case Study, a Principal
Investigator's Perspective, and discussion. 1 hr, 25 min, 19 sec;
78.1 Mb
9. Journal Editors Panel
and Discussion: Cathy DeAngelis (JAMA),
Veronique Kiermer (Nature family), Katrina Kelner (Science family).
1 hr, 13 min, 18 sec; 67.1 MB
10. Scott Zeger on
roles of authors and principal investigators,
and Panel on Institutional Responsibilities (Albert Reece, Harold
Paz, and Scott Zeger) with Discussion. 1 hr, 25 min, 12 sec; 78.0 Mb
Keith Baggerly on
Forensic Bioinformatics, mostly focused on the Duke case, with discussion.
2 hr, 44 min, 59 sec; 151 Mb
We supplied the IOM with several files pertaining to
our own presentation on "Forensic Bioinformatics":
Slides of our presentation
(with the color background
turned off)
A more detailed written summary, with references
A zip file of supplementary files, including
3 files for JCO (letter submitted, acknowledgment of receipt, and the rejection)
3 files for Lancet Oncology (letter submitted, a figure, and the rejection)
5 files for Nat Med (letter submitted, a figure, acknowledgment of receipt, the request to share with Potti and Nevins, and the rejection)
3 files for Victoria Stodden's course on reproducible research (a flyer, guidelines for students, and the syllabus)
Baggerly notes from ENAR.
Duke also supplied a "historical perspective" to accompany Joe Nevins' presentation.
Other files may eventually appear on the IOM's web page for this session.