Co-Clinical Imaging Resource Program (CIRP): Bridging the Translational Divide to Advance Precision Medicine.

dc.contributor.author

Shoghi, Kooresh I

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Badea, Cristian T

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Blocker, Stephanie J

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Chenevert, Thomas L

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Laforest, Richard

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Lewis, Michael T

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Luker, Gary D

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Manning, H Charles

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Marcus, Daniel S

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Mowery, Yvonne M

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Pickup, Stephen

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Richmond, Ann

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Ross, Brian D

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Vilgelm, Anna E

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Yankeelov, Thomas E

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Zhou, Rong

dc.date.accessioned

2020-10-05T11:22:38Z

dc.date.available

2020-10-05T11:22:38Z

dc.date.issued

2020-09

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2020-10-05T11:22:35Z

dc.description.abstract

The National Institutes of Health's (National Cancer Institute) precision medicine initiative emphasizes the biological and molecular bases for cancer prevention and treatment. Importantly, it addresses the need for consistency in preclinical and clinical research. To overcome the translational gap in cancer treatment and prevention, the cancer research community has been transitioning toward using animal models that more fatefully recapitulate human tumor biology. There is a growing need to develop best practices in translational research, including imaging research, to better inform therapeutic choices and decision-making. Therefore, the National Cancer Institute has recently launched the Co-Clinical Imaging Research Resource Program (CIRP). Its overarching mission is to advance the practice of precision medicine by establishing consensus-based best practices for co-clinical imaging research by developing optimized state-of-the-art translational quantitative imaging methodologies to enable disease detection, risk stratification, and assessment/prediction of response to therapy. In this communication, we discuss our involvement in the CIRP, detailing key considerations including animal model selection, co-clinical study design, need for standardization of co-clinical instruments, and harmonization of preclinical and clinical quantitative imaging pipelines. An underlying emphasis in the program is to develop best practices toward reproducible, repeatable, and precise quantitative imaging biomarkers for use in translational cancer imaging and therapy. We will conclude with our thoughts on informatics needs to enable collaborative and open science research to advance precision medicine.

dc.identifier

TOMO.2020.00023

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2379-1381

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2379-139X

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21576

dc.language

eng

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MDPI AG

dc.relation.ispartof

Tomography (Ann Arbor, Mich.)

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10.18383/j.tom.2020.00023

dc.subject

CT

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MR

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cell transplant model (CTM)

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co-clinical trial

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genetically engineered mouse model (GEMM)

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informatics

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patient-derived tumor xenograft (PDX)

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precision medicine

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preclinical PET

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quantitative imaging

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Co-Clinical Imaging Resource Program (CIRP): Bridging the Translational Divide to Advance Precision Medicine.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Badea, Cristian T|0000-0002-1850-2522

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Blocker, Stephanie J|0000-0002-6665-7844

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Mowery, Yvonne M|0000-0002-9839-2414

pubs.begin-page

273

pubs.end-page

287

pubs.issue

3

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

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Biomedical Engineering

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Radiology

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Duke

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Pratt School of Engineering

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Institutes and Centers

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

6

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