@ARTICLE{10.3389/fgene.2014.00152, AUTHOR={Servant, Nicolas and Roméjon, Julien and Gestraud, Pierre and La Rosa, Philippe and Lucotte, Georges and Lair, Séverine and Bernard, Virginie and Zeitouni, Bruno and Coffin, Fanny and Jules-Clément, Gérôme and Yvon, Florent and Lermine, Alban and Poullet, Patrick and Liva, Stéphane and Pook, Stuart and Popova, Tatiana and Barette, Camille and Prud’homme, François and Dick, Jean-Gabriel and Kamal, Maud and Le Tourneau, Christophe and Barillot, Emmanuel and Hupé, Philippe}, TITLE={Bioinformatics for precision medicine in oncology: principles and application to the SHIVA clinical trial}, JOURNAL={Frontiers in Genetics}, VOLUME={5}, YEAR={2014}, URL={https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2014.00152}, DOI={10.3389/fgene.2014.00152}, ISSN={1664-8021}, ABSTRACT={Precision medicine (PM) requires the delivery of individually adapted medical care based on the genetic characteristics of each patient and his/her tumor. The last decade witnessed the development of high-throughput technologies such as microarrays and next-generation sequencing which paved the way to PM in the field of oncology. While the cost of these technologies decreases, we are facing an exponential increase in the amount of data produced. Our ability to use this information in daily practice relies strongly on the availability of an efficient bioinformatics system that assists in the translation of knowledge from the bench towards molecular targeting and diagnosis. Clinical trials and routine diagnoses constitute different approaches, both requiring a strong bioinformatics environment capable of (i) warranting the integration and the traceability of data, (ii) ensuring the correct processing and analyses of genomic data, and (iii) applying well-defined and reproducible procedures for workflow management and decision-making. To address the issues, a seamless information system was developed at Institut Curie which facilitates the data integration and tracks in real-time the processing of individual samples. Moreover, computational pipelines were developed to identify reliably genomic alterations and mutations from the molecular profiles of each patient. After a rigorous quality control, a meaningful report is delivered to the clinicians and biologists for the therapeutic decision. The complete bioinformatics environment and the key points of its implementation are presented in the context of the SHIVA clinical trial, a multicentric randomized phase II trial comparing targeted therapy based on tumor molecular profiling versus conventional therapy in patients with refractory cancer. The numerous challenges faced in practice during the setting up and the conduct of this trial are discussed as an illustration of PM application.} }