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Global Alliance for Pharmacogenomics Expands
November 10, 2008 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

U.S. and Japanese scientists expand their pharmacogenomics collaboration with five new projects.

Launching a Global Alliance for Pharmacogenomics
April 14, 2008 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

U.S. and Japanese scientists partner to study genetic factors that influence the safety and effectiveness of medicines. 

Gene Expression Differences Affect Response to Drugs, Infections
February 28, 2008 • University of Chicago Medical Center

Researchers in the NIGMS-funded Pharmacogenetics Research Network have found that differences in gene expression levels between population groups can affect how they respond to drugs or fight off specific infections.

PGRN Researchers Question Need for Genetic Tests in All Cases
August 28, 2007 • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

People taking low doses of the cancer drug irinotecan need not undergo genetic testing first, say NIGMS-funded researchers.

Pharmacogenetics Guides Dosing of Common Blood Thinner
August 16, 2007 • Food and Drug Administration

Work by investigators affiliated with the NIH Pharmacogenetics Research Network has led to changes in the prescribing information of a widely used blood-thinning drug, warfarin (Coumadin).

Variations in Genes Linked to Toxicity of Leukemia Therapy
May 11, 2007 • St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

An NIGMS-funded study has discovered variations in certain genes that make some children with leukemia susceptible to toxic side effects from common chemotherapy drugs.

Hints for Better Care of Leukemia Survivors
March 20, 2007 • St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

The longest follow-up study ever done on children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, supported in part by NIGMS, identifies risks for survivors later in life.

Large Study Links Mutations to Leukemia
March 7, 2007 • St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

NIGMS-funded researchers scanned 350,000 locations across the genome of 242 pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia to identify new mutations that contribute to this common childhood cancer.

Computer Tool Helps Spot Risky Mutations
February 15, 2007 • Johns Hopkins University

NIGMS-funded researchers have created a computer tool to help predict which genetic mutations might affect a person's risk for cancer.

Current Cancer Therapy May Soon be Obsolete
April 18, 2006 • Washington University

Findings made by NIGMS-supported investigators suggest that traditional cancer treatments, which base drug regimens on a tumor's anatomical location, should eventually be replaced with therapies based on a tumor's pharmacologic profile.

NIH Awards Grant to Study Pharmacogenetics of Nicotine Addiction and Treatment
January 25, 2006 • SRI International

SRI International and the University of California, San Francisco, have been awarded $10 million to study the genetic basis for variation in response to medications for tobacco dependence. The new program will be part of the Pharmacogenetics Research Network (PGRN).

Genes' Influence on Drugs May Affect Health-Care Quality
January 4, 2006 • Washington University

Chances are good that a medication you take is one of several drugs that can be affected by genetic factors, according to a team of NIGMS-supported researchers.

Pharmacogenetics Test Licensed to Mayo Clinic
December 21, 2005 • University of Chicago

Researchers supported through the NIH Pharmacogenetics Research Network have licensed a genetic test for patients with colorectal cancer to the Mayo Clinic. The agreement will make the test available to patients nationwide starting this month.

Tamoxifen Benefit Tied to Inherited Gene
December 16, 2005 • Mayo Clinic

One of the most commonly administered drugs for breast cancer, tamoxifen, may not be as effective for women who inherit a common genetic change, according to an NIGMS-supported study.

NIH Renews Network Focused On How Genes Influence Drug Responses
September 28, 2005 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

NIGMS Awards $10 Million for Pharmacogenetics Research
August 29, 2005 • Washington University in St. Louis

NIGMS has awarded $10 million to researchers investigating how well anti-cancer therapies work in different patients. The funds will further work begun in 2001 as part of the NIGMS-supported Pharmacogenetics Research Network, a nationwide collaboration of scientists.

UF Researcher Gets $11 Million To Study Genes, Blood Pressure Drugs
August 18, 2005 • University of Florida

Mayo Clinic Receives $12.6 Million from NIH to Research Pharmacogenomics
July 26, 2005 • Mayo Clinic

$15 Million Grant Extends Study of How Genes Affect Cancer Chemotherapy
July 13, 2005 • University of Chicago Medical Center

Genetic Variation Alters Response to Common Anti-Clotting Drug
June 2, 2005 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Variations in a gene involved in blood clotting may explain why certain people require a lower or higher dose to get the full benefits of the anticoagulant drug warfarin, say NIGMS-funded researchers at the University of Washington in Seattle and Washington University in St. Louis.

New Insights Into Why Medicines Work Differently Among People
April 2, 2002 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Pharmacogenetics Research Network Chooses Journal to Publish PharmGKB Data
November 9, 2001 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Simple Breath Test Predicts Gene-Linked Drug Response
October 26, 2001 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

NIH Pharmacogenetics Research Network Announces New Members
September 4, 2001 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Pharmacogenetics Research Network Seeks Journal Partnership
June 1, 2001 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

NIH Hosts First Annual Meeting of the Pharmacogenetics Research Network
April 10, 2001 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

NIH To Study How Genes Affect Response to Medicines
August 8, 2000 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

First Awards Made in NIH Effort to Understand How Genes Affect People's Responses to Medicines
April 4, 2000 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

 
This page last updated November 7, 2008