3 things the CCDL is doing right now to keep pediatric cancer research moving forward

April 8, 2020

The Childhood Cancer Data Lab (CCDL) was founded by Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation to empower pediatric cancer researchers with knowledge, tools, and data to interrogate the vast amounts of biomedical data that they, and others, generate in order to accelerate childhood cancer research. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, many biomedical research labs are temporarily shuttered, and we don’t know when the labs will reopen. To help keep pediatric cancer research moving forward, here are 3 ways the CCDL is helping the research community during this time: refine.bio, virtual workshops, and the Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas project.

Making data available anywhere via refine.bio

Researchers can spend a significant amount of time downloading and reprocessing publicly available data before they are able to use it to answer their research questions. Right now, some people in the research community may have limited access to compute infrastructure. The CCDL team built refine.bio, which does the work of downloading and reprocessing so researchers don’t have to, ultimately saving researchers time. Uniformly processed gene expression data is freely available from refine.bio.

Virtual workshops to train pediatric cancer researchers to analyze their own data

The Data Lab team during a virtual meeting

Last year the CCDL team ran four in-person workshops to train pediatric cancer researchers to analyze their own experimental data. With university closures keeping some researchers out of the lab, the demand for opportunities to build data analysis skills has never been higher. The CCDL team is working to bring what makes their workshops a success to the virtual format: individualized attention, a commitment to helping participants work toward their own most pressing research questions, and giving participants access to computing environments that they can continue to use to analyze their data after the workshop ends. Stay tuned for more information!

Organizing the Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas

Commits to the OpenPBTA-analysis repository since the inception of the project
Commits to the OpenPBTA-analysis repository since the inception of the project

The Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas (OpenPBTA) is an open collaborative effort to analyze one of the largest collections of pediatric brain tumor data in the world. CCDL scientists organize the OpenPBTA project alongside scientists at the Center for Data-Driven Discovery in Biomedicine at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. We accept community contributions through a pull request model – analysts from anywhere in the world can propose an analysis and request to add code to the project here.

The Childhood Cancer Data Lab (CCDL) was founded by Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation to empower pediatric cancer researchers with knowledge, tools, and data to interrogate the vast amounts of biomedical data that they, and others, generate in order to accelerate childhood cancer research. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, many biomedical research labs are temporarily shuttered, and we don’t know when the labs will reopen. To help keep pediatric cancer research moving forward, here are 3 ways the CCDL is helping the research community during this time: refine.bio, virtual workshops, and the Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas project.

Making data available anywhere via refine.bio

Researchers can spend a significant amount of time downloading and reprocessing publicly available data before they are able to use it to answer their research questions. Right now, some people in the research community may have limited access to compute infrastructure. The CCDL team built refine.bio, which does the work of downloading and reprocessing so researchers don’t have to, ultimately saving researchers time. Uniformly processed gene expression data is freely available from refine.bio.

Virtual workshops to train pediatric cancer researchers to analyze their own data

The Data Lab team during a virtual meeting

Last year the CCDL team ran four in-person workshops to train pediatric cancer researchers to analyze their own experimental data. With university closures keeping some researchers out of the lab, the demand for opportunities to build data analysis skills has never been higher. The CCDL team is working to bring what makes their workshops a success to the virtual format: individualized attention, a commitment to helping participants work toward their own most pressing research questions, and giving participants access to computing environments that they can continue to use to analyze their data after the workshop ends. Stay tuned for more information!

Organizing the Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas

Commits to the OpenPBTA-analysis repository since the inception of the project
Commits to the OpenPBTA-analysis repository since the inception of the project

The Open Pediatric Brain Tumor Atlas (OpenPBTA) is an open collaborative effort to analyze one of the largest collections of pediatric brain tumor data in the world. CCDL scientists organize the OpenPBTA project alongside scientists at the Center for Data-Driven Discovery in Biomedicine at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. We accept community contributions through a pull request model – analysts from anywhere in the world can propose an analysis and request to add code to the project here.

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