EFTA00375518.pdf
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From: Lesley Groff
To: Joseph Thakuria
Subject: Re: Jeffrey Epstein-Invoice?
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2014 16:46:30 +0000
Hello Joe and happy Friday! Might you have anything to report to Jeffrey regarding the invoice he has
requested? Anything I can pass along?
Thanks, Lesley
On Jan 9, 2014, at 5:47 PM, Joseph Thakuria
wrote:
Thanks, Lesley - records are secure but the laptop was out of commission until late yesterday afternoon
unfortunately - making it impossible to check patient labs remotely.
Joe
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 5:43 PM, Lesley Groff
> wrote:
Oh my joe! It is never a dull moment for you!! Thank you so much for your reply and I will pass it along to
Jeffrey. I do hope your records are all secure and laptop in working order!! Lesley
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 9, 2014, at 5:36 PM, Joseph Thakuria <
wrote:
Lesley, sorry for the delay on my end. On top of work, travel and the holidays,my laptop was out of
commission because of problems with the mgh encryption program used to protect patient data for over 1
week which really set me behind on clinical work - as well as this invoice.
With some calls over the next few days I should have it wrapped up by Monday. If not, I'll provide quotes
on Monday for what I think would be worthwhile pursuing and leave placeholders for anything that still
needs follow up on.
Joe
On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 7:40 AM, Lesley Groff
wrote:
Hi Joe. Following up with you ... When do you think you might have an invoice ready for Jeffrey? I
would love to be able to give him an idea.
Thanks so very much, Lesley
Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 20, 2013, at 3:01 PM, Joseph Thakuria
wrote:
EFTA00375518
Hi Lesley,
Sony about the delay on this. Things have been more hectic than usual with the holidays and being
short-handed in the hospital and I'm still waiting on a few things related to the iPS lines and
bioinformatics vendors/platforms. I also have some travel planned.
Can I get this invoice to you and Jeffrey sometime during the week of 12130 when things will have
started to settle down?
Thanks,
Joe Thakuria
On Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 4:19 PM, Lesley Groff •
wrote:
Hi Joe! Thank you so much for this! I have passed along to Jeffrey your findings...lets see what he
has to say ...
Thanks again,
Lesley
On Dec 12, 2013, at 3:43 PM, Joseph Thakuria
wrote:
Hi Lesley,
Sorry I've been swamped with clinical work. We don't have a fellow this month so I've been in the
hospital until late every day this week.
Realistically I won't be able to provide a detailed invoice until early next week but here's the general
update:
1. I don't think donating sequencing of patient genomes or exomes will be an option anymore. I
think it will be too difficult to clear by mgh. And all the patients I had in mind were seen through
mgh. I'll let you know if this situation changes.
2. For whole genome sequencing in a clia lab, I think the best bet is to get this done directly through
Illumina. The cost for this is $5-10k but I'll run various options by him. They offer just the raw data
as well as 2 types of analyses. I think he should do all 3 but I'll include more details in the invoice.
(I'm still discussing with people from illumina and waiting for some calls back.)
3. In terms of analysis, since Jeffrey has said cost is not an issue, the best route in my opinion would
be to analyze across several of the genomic analyses tools currently available. Though it's not
critical to analyze across multiple tools, it's a new enough field that a) they each have their own
pros/cons, b) I don't think the illumina analyses (both options) provides enough features for in depth
analyses (this might seem surprising - but shouldn't be - since they're much more focused on their
sequencing instrumentation business over analyses tools), and c) comparing results across the
different ones for concordance is worthwhile. I've honed in on 2-4 I think are worth using and will
tally up the costs in the invoice.
4. Individualized cell lines: Jeffrey already has fibroblast cell lines from the skin biopsy done for the
pgp. Induced pluripotent stem cells (adult stem cells) can be made from these. They can also be
induced to differentiate into various cell types including neurons (which would otherwise, of course,
be difficult to obtain and study in a specific individual). I'm getting itemized costs but getting to iPS
EFTA00375519
cells costs around $10k and the process takes about 6 months (because of the multiple cell passages
needed in the protocol). (Success of course isn't guaranteed either.)
All this work should fall within or just a bit over the $30k or so Jeffrey mentioned over the phone.
Payment can be made by your group directly to the various vendors once you have that info. As I
discussed with Jeffrey on the phone, I won't personally accept money and any effort I contribute to
this will be pro bono. And, this goes without saying, but with respect to the vendors, these are just
suggestions so Jeffrey should feel free to use other vendors if he has other preferences.
I'm happy to go through his genome pro bono using the analyses tools his genomic data from
illumina will get loaded onto once it's available. I'm also happy to reassess as well in a year to try
and incorporate any new data that may be available relevant to his genome. At that time, there may
also be additional data to generate and analyze from studying his iPS or other cell lines. On that
front, it may also be interesting to do a genome on his fibroblast cells (which we currently have
unlike the iPS cells). I wouldn't expect to get additional medical info from that but it helps give a
handle on mutations that are present in the fibros and not him - and later in the iPS cells but not
native cells. (And, therefore, give you a handle on how accurately these cells will reflect normal
physiology when further studied.) At some point we can compare his white blood cell genome to
fibroblast cells to iPS cells and other derived cells.
Some of this hassle, such as needing multiple vendors for sequencing and analyses, just comes with
the territory of being an early adopter. This will get cheaper and the process should be more
straightforward over time. And while no one can guarantee benefit from genome sequencing,
especially in someone relatively healthy, there is the possibility of reaping benefit as an early
adopter before others if something medically actionable is discovered in his data. (We'll also
concentrate our analyses on those 56 genes the ACMG recommended checking even in healthy
individuals).
More to follow and apologies for the delay on the invoice. You can see I've been looking into it
though and there are still a few moving pieces. I'm sorry about the news on funding patient
sequences. Jeffrey sounded excited about that possibility. His genomic data should be interesting
though and even if it's of limited use now, he'll be able to go back and reanalyze the data in the
future as more is collectively learned in this field.
Best,
Joe
On Dec 11, 2013 5:23 PM, "Lesley Groff'
wrote:
Hi Joe...can you please give me the ETA or e rey s invoice.
m sorry to keep pestering you,
but Jeffrey has asked that I stay on top of this...it is quite important to him.
Any update would be tremendously helpful.
Thank you,
Lesley
Assistant to Jeffrey Epstein
EFTA00375520
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| Filename | EFTA00375518.pdf |
| File Size | 232.4 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 7,416 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T16:11:10.982979 |