
Dear Colleague:
The National Institutes of Health is pleased to invite you to the seventh annual symposium on the Functional Genomics of Critical Illness and Injury, to be held December 7, 2009 at the Natcher Conference Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. The symposium is being held in conjunction with the inaugural meeting of the United States Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group (USCIITG).
Investigators using genomic and proteomic approaches to study injury and critical illness face major challenges unique to these methods regarding resources, experimental design, and data analysis. Human studies in critically ill or injured patients have special requirements related to safety, vulnerability, and privacy, while genomic research itself raises additional ethical considerations. It is clear that multi-institutional efforts are needed to provide the organizational and investigative framework necessary to optimize resource utilization and data accrual for functional genomics studies of critical illness and injury.
The objectives of these yearly symposia are three-fold: i) offering educational presentations; ii) seeking consensus on key scientific goals; and iii) encouraging collaboration to achieve those goals. The first two symposia provided an educational forum on new high-throughput technologies, systems biology, computational biology, and bioinformatics. The third symposium reached consensus on the value of applying high-dimensional biotechnologies to the study of critically ill and injured patients. The fourth symposium addressed systems approaches to the investigation of pathophysiology and the concomitant need for establishing multidisciplinary research networks to conduct such studies. The fifth symposium scientific leaders within the United States critical illness and injury community discussed a strategic plan for critical illness and injury clinical research in the United States. The last symposium focused on Epigenetics and Stress, New Technologies and Applications and Phenomics; The Role of Information Systems.
This symposium series is a unique opportunity for communication and collaboration among the diverse fields committed to applying lessons from functional genomics at the bedside of critically ill and injured patients. We look forward to welcoming you to Bethesda this December.
Sincerely,
The Organizing Committee
J. Perren Cobb, MD
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts
Anthony F. Suffredini, MD
Critical Care Medicine Department
NIH Clinical Center, DHHS
Robert L. Danner, MD
Critical Care Medicine Department
NIH Clinical Center, DHHS
Peter J. Munson, PhD
Center for Information Technology
National Institutes of Health, DHHS
Scott D. Somers, PhD
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
National Institutes of Health, DHHS
Ramona Hicks, PhD
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
National Institutes of Health, DHHS
Andrea Harabin, PhD
National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
National Institutes of Health, DHHS