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| visits | member for | 1 year, 3 months |
| seen | Mar 20 at 2:52 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
Medical student in the United States with a bachelor's degree in biochemistry and a master's degree in public health. Slowly but steadily learning more about the basics of statistics with an emphasis on techniques with application to clinical research. R and Stata user.
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Mar 20 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Nov 18 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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May 15 |
awarded | Critic |
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Jan 26 |
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Looking for a cancer drug target database to guide sequencing of patient tumor DNA Although, upon further reading their website, it may be possible to upgrade the machine to do this in the future by changing the chip. We are getting the machine delivered to the lab this afternoon, so I haven't actually gotten to play with it yet. If anyone else has more comments or suggestions, please let me know! Thanks. |
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Jan 26 |
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Looking for a cancer drug target database to guide sequencing of patient tumor DNA Thanks for the comments everyone. We have purchased an Ion PGM sequencer, which is not capable of performing whole exome sequencing. The company says that the sequencer is "ideal for sequencing small genomes, sets of genes, or performing gene expression profiling or ChIP-Seq." Researchers can interrogate "targeted genomic regions using up to 1,536 amplicons in a single tube, in a single day." Their website is www.iontorrent.com. For this reason we would like to design a panel of particular genes to sequence in each tumor type. I will check out the other websites that you all have suggested. |
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Jan 24 |
awarded | Student |
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Jan 24 |
asked | Looking for a cancer drug target database to guide sequencing of patient tumor DNA |