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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.

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On page 4 showing 61 ~ 80 out of 299 results
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  • RRID:SCR_010927

http://www.zbh.uni-hamburg.de/?id=292

A web-based software tool for the integrative analysis of cancer genomics data. It stores different kinds of downstream processed data from multiple samples in a single database. A powerful search interface allows to dynamically filter the data to be displayed with respect to different criteria. The combination of AJAX technology and a fast visualization engine facilitates a highly dynamic visualization for large amounts of data. FISH Oracle 2 is able to simultaneously display different data sets, thus simplifying their comparison. Filter and display options can be changed on the fly. High quality image export enables the life scientist to easily communicate the results, e.g. in presentations or publications. A comprehensive data administration assures to keep track of the data stored in the database.

Proper citation: FISH Oracle (RRID:SCR_010927) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_008559

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://www.ariad.com/

Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotechnology company focused on cancer. Focus areas are blood cancers and solid tumors. Compounds: ponatinib, AP26113, ridaforolimus and AP1903., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.

Proper citation: ARIAD (RRID:SCR_008559) Copy   


http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/CTCAE

A coding system for reporting adverse events that occur in the course of cancer therapy. It was derived from the Common Toxicity Criteria (CTC) v2.0 and is maintained by the Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program (CTEP) at the National Cancer Institution (NCI).

Proper citation: Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (RRID:SCR_010296) Copy   


https://ccsp.hms.harvard.edu/

Center includes studies for responsiveness and resistance to anti cancer drugs. Committed to training students and postdocs, promoting junior faculty and ensuring that data and software are reproducible, reliable and publicly accessible. Member of National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Systems Biology Consortium.

Proper citation: Harvard Medical School Center for Cancer Systems Pharmacology (RRID:SCR_022831) Copy   


https://www.mitochondriasci.com/cancer.html

Creative Biogene provides comprehensive range of services and products to assist researchers in cancer related mitochondria studies. Offers tests and services with advantage of cell based and animal based models.

Proper citation: Creative Biogene Mitochondrial Gene Mutations (RRID:SCR_022082) Copy   


http://cancer.osu.edu/research/cancerresearch/sharedresources/ltb/Pages/index.aspx

The OSU Comprehensive Cancer Center Leukemia Tissue Bank Shared Resource (LTBSR) facilitates the successful translation of basic leukemia research to the clinical setting via an extensive repository of tissue samples and accompanying pathologic, cytogenetic and clinical data for ready correlation of clinical and biological results. The LTBSR, which is an NCI-sponsored biorepository, has more than 40,000 vials of cryopreserved viable cells and 13,000 vials of matched frozen plasma and/or serum samples from more than 4,000 patients treated for leukemia and other malignancies. Committed to furthering translational research efforts for OSUCCC - James members and the cancer research community, the LTBSR provides investigators with training and technical support as well as procurement, processing, storage, retrieval and distribution of clinical research materials. In many cases, the LTBSR serves as the central processing lab for multi-site trials in which the principal investigator is an OSUCCC - James member. The LTBSR's goals are to: * Provide a central collection, processing and a state-of-the-art repository for samples collected from leukemia patients treated on OSUCCC - James protocols, and * Provide materials to investigators involved in collaborative studies with OSU, who examine relevant cellular and molecular properties of leukemia and correlate these properties with clinical or population-based outcomes.

Proper citation: Ohio State Leukemia Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_000529) Copy   


http://magi.cs.brown.edu/

A tool for annotating, exploring, and analyzing gene sets that may be associated with cancer.

Proper citation: Mutation Annotation and Genomic Interpretation (RRID:SCR_002800) Copy   


http://www.uab.edu/medicine/tcbf/tpsf-sidebar

The Tissue Procurement Shared Facility (TPSF) of the Comprehensive Cancer Center operates as a prospective service to collect, from UAB associated hospitals, normal, malignant, benign, and diseased fresh human tissues and fluids which are then preserved appropriate to protocol. The TPSF can provide normal, malignant, benign, or diseased remnant human tissues and/or fluids from surgical resections, autopsies, or clinical procedures for IRB-approved researchers. The preservation can include fresh storage in media or saline, snap-frozen storage in liquid nitrogen, freezing in OCT for frozen section preparation, or preservation in a fixative of choice. The TPSF can also provide procurement of control tissues including uninvolved tissues or matched tissues from patients with benign disease processes. The histology laboratory can provide paraffin blocks and/or stained or unstained slides. In addition, investigators can obtain access to rare tissues through the national Cooperative Human Tissue Network (CHTN). Although the facility operates as a prospective service specializing in the preparation of samples to protocol, limited banked frozen and paraffin-embedded samples may be available. Investigators are required to complete an application and provide a copy of their IRB approval as well as a brief description of the project for which the requested samples will be utilized. Samples are provided for research purposes only. Processing fees are to offset processing costs and should be included in all grant applications.

Proper citation: UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center Tissue Procurement Shared Facility (RRID:SCR_004222) Copy   


http://www.georgiacancer.org/res-tissue.php

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 17, 2013.
The Georgia Cancer Specimen and Tissue Bank is committed to a safe and reliable supply of tissue and cell products for research purposes. Work has begun already to build the state tumor bank initiative with operating sites in several locations through the state. We are confident that our results will yield a strong program that will benefit all Georgians and contribute to significant advances in cancer research and knowledge.

Proper citation: Biorepository Alliance of Georgia for Oncology (RRID:SCR_004184) Copy   


http://acsr.ucsf.edu/

A biorepository for HIV-infected human biospecimens from a wide spectrum of HIV-related or associated diseases, including cancer, and from appropriate HIV-negative controls. The ACSR has formalin-fixed paraffin embedded biospecimens, fresh frozen biospecimens, malignant cell suspensions, fine needle aspirates, and cell lines from patients with HIV-related malignancies. It also contains serum, plasma, urine, bone marrow, cervical and anal specimens, saliva, semen, and multi-site autopsy speicmens from patients with HIV-related malignancies including those who have participated in clinical trials. The ACSR has an associated databank that contains prognostic, staging, outcome and treatment data on patients from whom tissues were obtained. The ACSR database contains more than 300,000 individual biospecimens with associated clinical information. Biospecimens are entered into the ACSR database by processing type, disease category, and number of cases defined by disease category.

Proper citation: AIDS and Cancer Specimen Resource (RRID:SCR_004216) Copy   


https://scicrunch.org/browse/resourcesedit/SCR_004214

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented May 18, 2022. A tumor bank that provides a large collection of cancer specimens, from breast and other cancers, annotated with clinical information. The CBCF TB enables researchers to address unanswered questions concerning the prognosis and treatment of breast cancer and other cancers. The CBCF TB website is also directed to participants interested in donating tumor tissue or blood. Biological specimens such as blood, urine, bone marrow, and ascites (fluid that sometimes collects in the abdomen) contain genetic information, just as tumor tissue does. These samples can be used in studies that may help researchers see how people with certain genetic make-ups respond to certain treatments. It can also explain why different people have different health problems. CBCF TB, formerly ARTB, was created by a merger of components of two existing Tumor-banking initiatives, the CLS Repository in Calgary and the Tumor bank of the PolyomX Program in Edmonton.

Proper citation: Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation Tumor Bank (RRID:SCR_004214) Copy   


http://www.azcc.arizona.edu/research/shared-services/tacmass/tissue-acquisition

TACMASS collects, preserves, and banks biospecimens obtained from Arizona Cancer Center surgical patients who are seen by University Medical Center surgeons and oncologists. Biospecimens collected at the time of surgery include fresh surgical tissue, blood and urine. Serum, plasma and genomic DNA are harvested from the whole blood. AZCC Members and collaborators may request the use of banked biospecimens through TACMASS. The patient's surgeon or oncologist is responsible for consenting the patient for submission of surgical specimens to the AZCC BioRepository (IRB #06-0609-04, Setsuko Chambers, PI). The surgeon and the Department of Pathology attending physicians and residents are responsible for identifying appropriate tissue for banking that will not compromise pathological diagnosis. Tumor and/or normal adjacent tissue, identified by gross examination, that will not be needed for pathological diagnosis are preserved by fixing in formalin, snap freezing, and/or fixing in RNALater. Histological diagnosis is rendered on each piece of formalin-fixed and snap frozen tissue by Hematoxylin and Eosin staining (H&E). Everyone involved in submitting specimens to the Tumor Bank must maintain a current CITI Certification.

Proper citation: Arizona Cancer Center Tumor Bank (RRID:SCR_003544) Copy   


http://www.cancer.duke.edu/modules/TissueProcurement29/index.php?id=1

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 16, 2013. Over 10,000 patient consents, 5,000 banking events, and 40,000 biospecimens have been processed to date with storage of both formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue and frozen tissue located within multiple freezers spanning temperatures in the range of -80 degrees to -180 degrees C depending on protocol requirements. Considerable effort continues to be expended to assure compliance with IRB, NIH and HIPAA best practices and guidelines on banking human tissues. The biorepository in place today is the result of the combined efforts of the Duke Cancer Institute (DCI) Breast SPORE, DCI Shared Resource for Tissue and Blood Procurement, and the Duke University School of Medicine Research Foundation (DUSOM-RF). The DCI and the School of Medicine Research Foundation (SOMRF) have funded the collection of frozen and fixed tissues, both malignant and benign, under an ?????????????????excess tissue????????????????? protocol that utilizes freshly excised tissue that is available for research after the needs of the pathologic workup are met. This program procures tissues from many anatomic sites including breast. Recently Duke''s Institute of Genome Science & Policy (IGSP), under the direction of Drs. Geoff Ginsburg and Tom Burke, initiated a blood collection program that spans several departments and institutes. The Breast SPORE blood collection program served as the pilot for this much larger effort. The Breast SPORE tissue and blood collection effort utilizes much of the same infrastructure and personnel that are also supported by the DCI, SOMRF, and IGSP.

Proper citation: DCI Tissue and Blood Procurement Shared Resource (RRID:SCR_004116) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_023364

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://humantumoratlas.org

HTAN is National Cancer Institute funded Cancer Moonshot initiative to construct 3-dimensional atlases of dynamic cellular, morphological, and molecular features of human cancers as they evolve from precancerous lesions to advanced disease.Provides three dimensional atlases of cancer transitions for diverse set of tumor types. Efforts to map healthy organs and previous large-scale cancer genomics approaches focused on bulk sequencing at single point in time. Data portal for Human Tumor Atlas Network. Data available on HTAN Portal is open access. Certain data types with potential for re-identification are available in restricted access through dbGAP.

Proper citation: Human Tumor Atlas Network (RRID:SCR_023364) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_023931

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://www.cancermodels.org/

Cancer research platform that aggregates clinical, genomic and functional data from various types of patient derived cancer models, xenographs, organoids and cell lines. Open catalog of harmonised patient-derived cancer models. Standardises, harmonises and integrates clinical metadata, molecular and treatment-based data from academic and commercial providers worldwide. Data is FAIR and underpins generation and testing of new hypotheses in cancer mechanisms and personalised medicine development. PDCM Finder have expanded to organoids and cell lines and is now called CancerModels.Org. PDCM Finder was launched in April 2022 as successor of PDX Finder portal, which focused solely on patient-derived xenograft models.

Proper citation: CancerModels.Org (RRID:SCR_023931) Copy   


https://hints.cancer.gov/

Regularly collects nationally representative data about American public’s knowledge of, attitudes toward, and use of cancer and health related information. HINTS data are used to monitor changes in fields of health communication and health information technology and to create more effective health communication strategies across different populations. Weighted, nationally representative probability based survey of civilian, non-institutionalized adults administered by National Cancer Institute on knowledge of and attitudes toward cancer relevant information.

Proper citation: Health Information National Trends Survey (RRID:SCR_023943) Copy   


https://ganjoho.jp/public/index.html

Portal provides information on Cancer Statistics in Japan. Official website operated by National Cancer Center for cancer information.

Proper citation: Cancer Information Service (RRID:SCR_024445) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014700

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://pub.ist.ac.at/ttp/

Software used to simulate tumor progression in various stages of growth in order to study the process' dynamics. The input can be fitness landscape, mutation rate, and cell division time. The output is growth dynamics and other relevant statistics, such as expected tumor detection time and expected appearance time of surviving mutants. The tool is implemented in Java and runs on all operating systems which run a Java Virtual Machine (JVM) of version 1.7 or above.

Proper citation: Tool for Tumor Progression (RRID:SCR_014700) Copy   


http://sharedresources.fredhutch.org/core-facilities/bioinformatics

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE.Documented on July 27,2022. Core provides bioinformatics specialists available to assist researchers with processing, exploring, and understanding genomics data.

Proper citation: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Co-operative Center for Excellence in Hematology Bioinformatics Resource (RRID:SCR_015324) Copy   


http://glioblastoma.alleninstitute.org/

Platform for exploring the anatomic and genetic basis of glioblastoma at the cellular and molecular levels that includes two interactive databases linked together by de-identified tumor specimen numbers to facilitate comparisons across data modalities: * The open public image database, here, providing in situ hybridization data mapping gene expression across the anatomic structures inherent in glioblastoma, as well as associated histological data suitable for neuropathological examination * A companion database (Ivy GAP Clinical and Genomic Database) offering detailed clinical, genomic, and expression array data sets that are designed to elucidate the pathways involved in glioblastoma development and progression. This database requires registration for access. The hope is that researchers all over the world will mine these data and identify trends, correlations, and interesting leads for further studies with significant translational and clinical outcomes. The Ivy Glioblastoma Atlas Project is a collaborative partnership between the Ben and Catherine Ivy Foundation, the Allen Institute for Brain Science and the Ben and Catherine Ivy Center for Advanced Brain Tumor Treatment.

Proper citation: Ivy Glioblastoma Atlas Project (RRID:SCR_005044) Copy   



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