Project 170523

From oncogenes to genomic medicine: a social and historical analysis of translational cancer research

170523

From oncogenes to genomic medicine: a social and historical analysis of translational cancer research

$283,013
Project Information
Study Type: Other Qualitative
Therapeutic Area: Oncology
Research Theme: Social / Cultural / Environmental / Population Health
Disease Area: cancer genomics and translational research
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Cambrosio, Alberto; Keating, Peter
Institution: McGill University
CIHR Institute: Health Services and Policy Research
Program: Operating Grant
Peer Review Committee: Health Ethics, Law & Humanities
Competition Year: 2008
Term: 4 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

Promoters of genomic medicine, that is to say, medicine informed by the results of the recent mapping of the human genome, promise a revolution in all areas of clinical practice ranging from diagnosis to prognosis and therapeutics. From personalized medicine to genomic markers of disease and responses to therapy, the results of the application of such technologies as genome-wide mapping are expected to be wide-ranging, substantive and rapid. The purpose of the present proposal is to investigate the introduction of genomic techniques and concepts in the field of cancer medicine from two points of view: the historical and the sociological. The historical part of our study will concentrate on an analysis of the public, academic and commercial programs designed to capitalize on the therapeutic insights offered by the new molecular genetics of cancer inaugurated in the early 1980s with the discovery of the first human oncogenes. The sociological analysis will continue the study into the post-genomic era and will target the rearrangement of the relations between the laboratory and the clinic (often referred to as translational research) that results in the emergence of new collective modes of practice and interaction in the biomedical sciences.

Research Characteristics

This project includes the following research characteristics:

Implementation Science
Industry Partnership
Ethics Focus
Knowledge Translation Focus
Personalized Medicine
Study Justification

"investigate the introduction of genomic techniques and concepts in the field of cancer medicine from two points of view: the historical and the sociological"

Novelty Statement

"N/A"

Methodology Innovation

N/A

Keywords
Cancer Genomics History Oncogenes Sociology Translational Research