TAG ARCHIVE

POSTS TAGGED AS pharmacogenomics

First Artificial Ribosome

November 24, 2015 | | Posted in Newsletter

Ribosomes in a Cell
I almost missed this piece from last summer and it would have been a major oversight had [MORE]

Illumina’s “PopArray” for Population Health

November 17, 2015 | | Posted in Newsletter

DNA sequencing machine manufacturer Illumina (San Diego, CA) has taken a surprising step toward a competing technology, microarray, for a [MORE]

The Last Decade’s Ten Most Important Technological Advances

March 25, 2014 | | Posted in Newsletter

Solohealth Station
You may not agree with Becker’s list of the ten biggest technological advances for healthcare in the last decade, [MORE]

Pilot in Clinical Genomics: Gene-Drug Interactions

June 11, 2013 | | Posted in Newsletter

Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York has enrolled (i.e. contributing blood samples) some 25,000 patients in its biorepository, [MORE]

Genetic Testing at Your Neighborhood Pharmacy

March 9, 2010 | | Posted in Newsletter

Pharmocogenics and DNA
Imagine a time-about a century ago-when physicians generally accepted the idea that germs caused disease, but didn’t [MORE]

“Gene Chip” for Dosing Analysis

February 9, 2010 | | Posted in Newsletter

John Deeken, MD
Recently, The Pharmacogenomics Journal published a study that John Deeken, at Georgetown University’s Lombardi Cancer Center, [MORE]

Gene Testing in the Doctor’s Office

January 12, 2010 | | Posted in Newsletter

Gene Testing
Last October, Nanosphere, Inc. (Northbrook, IL) received FDA approval for “the first nanotechnology-based microfluidics product capable of analyzing [MORE]