THANK YOU SIR. Absolutely helpful for a novice like me.
Regards
Fraction.

 
Current contact address:
 
Fraction K. Dzinjalamala, MSc, Ph.D.
Senior Lecturer in Clinical Pharmacology and Medicinal Chemistry
Department of Pharmacy,
College of Medicine,
University of Malawi,
P/Bag 360, Chichiri,
Blantyre 3,
Malawi.
 
Fone: (265) 999 631295 
 

________________________________
 From: "Graaf, P.H. van der" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 9, 2013 8:42 AM
Subject: [NMusers] Pharmacometrics Tutorials
  


NONMEM Tutorial
Dear Nmusers,
We try not to bombard this distribution list with too many communications 
fromCPT: Pharmacometrics & Systems Pharmacology (CPT:PSP), but thought it would 
be appropriate to draw your attention to various Tutorials on the foundations 
of Pharmacometrics that have been published recently:
Basic Concepts in Population modeling and Model-Based Drug Development (D. 
Mould and R. Upton):
Part 1: http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v1/n9/full/psp20124a.html
Part 2: http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v2/n4/full/psp201314a.html
A Time to Event Tutorial for Pharmacometricians (N. Holford):
http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v2/n5/full/psp201318a.html
Modeling and Simulation Workbench for NONMEM: Tutorial on Pirana, PsN, and 
Xpose (R. Keizer, M. Karlsson and A. Hooker):
http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v2/n6/full/psp201324a.html
Establishing Best Practices and Guidance in Population Modeling: an Experience 
with an Internal Population Pharmacokinetic Analysis Guidance (W. Byon et al.):
http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v2/n7/full/psp201326a.html
http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v2/n7/full/psp201337a.html
As explained in a recent Editorial 
(http://www.nature.com/psp/journal/v2/n7/full/psp201327a.html), 
aCPT:PSPTutorial is intended as aneducational article providing practical 
tutorial on tools, methodologies, and approaches. Tutorials aim to increase the 
awareness and potential of Pharmacometrics and Systems Pharmacology outside the 
disciplines, introduce methodology to newcomers interested in model-based 
approaches, and provide further training and specialized guides to those 
already working in the field. The open-access format ofCPT:PSP also provides an 
excellent platform byallowing efficient distribution to researchers worldwide.  
For most Tutorials, model code and example datasets will be available as 
supplementary material, allowing readers to practice the case studies 
‘hands-on’.
More Tutorials will become available this year, the next one on 
Physiologically-Based Pharmacokinetics (PBPK). New articles are published 
weekly atwww.nature.com/psp
Kind regards,
Piet van der Graaf, Editor-in Chief
Lena Friberg, Deputy Editor-in-Chief
CPT: Pharmacometrics & Systems Pharmacology (CPT:PSP)
[email protected]

Reply via email to