workshop image
Course Description

This course explores the evolving field of personalized cancer treatment, focusing on tailoring treatment strategies to patients based on their unique molecular profiles. Participants will gain a comprehensive understanding of the field of pharmacogenomics and a guided workflow covering basic to advanced biomarker analysis. Our primary emphasis is on the analysis of cancer biomarkers; however, the principles and methodologies covered in this context are transferable and applicable to other disease areas.

The course is designed to provide sufficient context to beginners, building up from basics to tools and methods of data analysis. The hands-on practical tutorials for each session will provide the participants with practical insights into the data as well as tools to perform biomarker analysis on their own. By the end of this introductory course, participants will be equipped with the knowledge and skills to understand data requirements and perform biomarker analysis. 

Course Objectives

Participants will gain practical experience and skills to be able to:

  • Extract features for biomarker discovery from -omics data (RNA-Seq, methylation, mutations, proteomics, chromatin profiling, etc)
  • Navigate pharmacogenomics datasets and data preparation for pharmacogenomic analysis
  • Identify univariable biomarkers from RNA-Seq data
  • Perform meta-analysis to identify robust biomarkers
  • Visualize and summarize the output of pharmacogenomic biomarker analysis
Target Audience

Graduates, postgraduates, staff bioinformaticians, analysts, PIs, clinicians, and anyone interested in biomarker analysis.

Prerequisites

Participants should be comfortable writing and reading basic R.

You will require your own laptop computer. Minimum requirements: 1024×768 screen resolution, 1.5GHz CPU, 4GB RAM, 20GB free disk space, recent versions of Windows, Mac OS X or Linux (Most computers purchased in the past 3-4 years likely meet these requirements).

This workshop requires participants to complete pre-workshop tasks and readings which includes installing and setting up an R environment. 

Course Outline

Module 1: Introduction to pharmacogenomics in the context of cancer (Benjamin Haibe-Kains)

  • A brief introduction to precision oncology and biomarkers
    • Overview to personalized cancer treatment and the role of biomarker discovery
    • What is “pharmacogenomics”; is it different from pharmacogenetics?
    • Challenges in biomarker discovery 
  • Brief introduction to biomarkers in pharmacogenomics
    • Conventional markers: oncogenic mutations, gene expression, proteomics
    • Exciting new fields: mutational signatures, synthetic lethality, chromatin accessibility
    • Other markers like radiomic features
  • Overview of methods for patient profiling
    • Sequencing technologies: RNA-Seq, Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS), Whole Exome Sequencing (WES), etc.
    • Solid tumor vs liquid biopsy

Lab Practical – Getting to know multi-omics data (Julia Nguyen, Jermiah Joseph, Nikta Feizi)

  • Loading in expression matrices for various -omics data (RNA-Seq, methylation, mutations, proteomics, chromatin profiling) 
  • Exploring feature extraction techniques to define biomarkers from (epi)genomic data

Module 2: Data preparation for pharmacogenomic analysis (Jermiah Joseph)

  • Common preclinical pharmacogenomic models and importance of clinical validation
  • What is in a typical pharmacogenomic dataset?:  dataset overview using PharmacoGx
  • Quality control: batch effects, outliers, missing values, and common sources of variation

Lab Practical – Hands-on with pharmacogenomics data  (Jermiah Joseph, Almas Khan)

  • Loading a PharmacoSet in R using PharmacoGx or ORCESTRA, understanding the data structure, accessing features, and preparing metadata
  • Plot batch effects using PCA and run correction method (SVA)
  • Filter out outliers and missing values

Module 3: Pharmacogenomics for biomarker discovery – Basic analysis (Nikta Feizi, Julia Nguyen)

  • Data analysis walk-through
  • Statistical methods for drug response associations
    • Computing drug response associations using Concordance Index and Pearson’s correlation
    • Introduction to univariable vs. multivariable analysis for biomarkers

Lab Practical – Statistical analysis – Part 1 (Nikta Feizi, Julia Nguyen)

  • Basic functionalities of PharmacoGx
  • Case study – Univariable analysis of drug response using PharmacoGx 
  • Plotting associations and interpretation of results in R

 

Module 4: Pharmacogenomics for biomarker discovery – Advanced analysis (Nikta Feizi, Julia Nguyen)

  • Meta-analysis
    • Introduction to “meta-analysis” in the context of inter-study investigations
    • Visualization and interpretation using forest plots
    • How to interpret meta-analysis statistics 
  • Sub-group analysis
    • Identifying tissue-specific biomarkers with an example of cancer subtypes 
    • Other factors to consider (tumor grade, biological sex, etc)
  • Future directions with clinical datasets

Lab Practical – Statistical analysis – Part 2 (Nikta Feizi, Julia Nguyen)

  • Run meta-analysis on ~4 small PharmacoSets for a biomarker of interest for pan-cancer and cancer-specific data
  • Generate and interpret forest plots with statistics
Workshop Details:

Duration: 2 days

Start: Oct 17, 2024

End: Oct 18, 2024

Location: Toronto, Ontario Canada
Course Mode:

Status: Registration Closed

Workshop Ended

Offers:
CAD $495 for applications received between February 7, 2024 to August 17, 2024
CAD $695 for applications received between August 18, 2024 to October 3, 2024
Limited to: 30 participants
Open Access Content:

Canadian Bioinformatics Workshops promotes open access. Past workshop content is available under a Creative Commons License.

Funders
FunderLogoFunderLogoFunderLogoFunderLogoFunderLogo

Posted on: