Cancer is mainly caused by somatic genome alterations (SGAs). Precision oncology involves identifying and targeting tumor-specific aberrations resulting from causative SGAs. We developed a novel tumor-specific computational framework that finds the likely causative SGAs in an individual tumor and estimates their impact on oncogenic processes, which suggests the disease mechanisms that are acting in that tumor. This information can be used to guide precision oncology. We report a tumor-specific causal inference (TCI) framework, which estimates causative SGAs by modeling causal relationships between SGAs and molecular phenotypes (e.g., transcriptomic, proteomic, or metabolomic changes) within an individual tumor. We applied the TCI algorithm ...
Cancer is a very complex genetic disease driven by combinations of mutated genes. This complexity st...
SummaryThe genome of a cancer cell carries somatic mutations that are the cumulative consequences of...
Driver mutations are the genetic variants responsible for oncogenesis, but how specific somatic muta...
Cancer is a complex disease driven by somatic genomic alterations (SGAs) that perturb signaling path...
Background: Recent advances in sequencing technologies enable the large-scale identification of gene...
Abstract\ud \ud An important goal of cancer genomic research is to identify the driving pathways und...
High-throughput genome sequencing and other techniques provide a cost-effective way to study cancer ...
The transformation of a normal cell into a cancer cell involves the accumulation of somatic DNA alte...
Cancer is a genetic disease. Transformation to malignancy occurs primarily by genome aberrations, w...
Cancer cells retain genomic alterations that provide a selective advantage. The prediction and valid...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) has catalyzed systematic characterization of diverse genomic alterati...
Cancer research, like many areas of science, is adapting to a new era characterized by increasing qu...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) has catalyzed systematic characterization of diverse genomic alterati...
Tumors commonly exhibit high levels of both inter- and intra- heterogeneity. For this reason, the op...
Cancer is a disease often characterized by the presence of multiple genomic alterations, which trigg...
Cancer is a very complex genetic disease driven by combinations of mutated genes. This complexity st...
SummaryThe genome of a cancer cell carries somatic mutations that are the cumulative consequences of...
Driver mutations are the genetic variants responsible for oncogenesis, but how specific somatic muta...
Cancer is a complex disease driven by somatic genomic alterations (SGAs) that perturb signaling path...
Background: Recent advances in sequencing technologies enable the large-scale identification of gene...
Abstract\ud \ud An important goal of cancer genomic research is to identify the driving pathways und...
High-throughput genome sequencing and other techniques provide a cost-effective way to study cancer ...
The transformation of a normal cell into a cancer cell involves the accumulation of somatic DNA alte...
Cancer is a genetic disease. Transformation to malignancy occurs primarily by genome aberrations, w...
Cancer cells retain genomic alterations that provide a selective advantage. The prediction and valid...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) has catalyzed systematic characterization of diverse genomic alterati...
Cancer research, like many areas of science, is adapting to a new era characterized by increasing qu...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) has catalyzed systematic characterization of diverse genomic alterati...
Tumors commonly exhibit high levels of both inter- and intra- heterogeneity. For this reason, the op...
Cancer is a disease often characterized by the presence of multiple genomic alterations, which trigg...
Cancer is a very complex genetic disease driven by combinations of mutated genes. This complexity st...
SummaryThe genome of a cancer cell carries somatic mutations that are the cumulative consequences of...
Driver mutations are the genetic variants responsible for oncogenesis, but how specific somatic muta...