|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This book offers pertinent basic science information on strategies
used for the rational design and discovery of novel anticancer
agents, and, in addition, translational studies involving clinical
trial design and execution with these novel, mostly cytostatic
agents. This book covers basic science strategies that are being
used in drug discovery and preclinical evaluation focused on novel
molecular targets, as well as clinical trial methodology including
clinical pharmacokinetics and imaging to address issues of efficacy
evaluation of the new, relatively non-cytotoxic anticancer agents.
At present, there is no book that provides such an integration of
basic and clinical studies of novel anticancer agents, covering
both drug discovery and translational research extensively.
* Addresses the critical issues involved in the development of
novel agents for cancer therapy by experts in the field
* Presents drug discovery strategies
* Discusses regulatory issues surrounding drug development
*
We are in an exciting era in the war against cancer, with real
prospects for novel anticancer drugs that are cancer cell-specific
without the toxicities that have been the hallmark of conventional
cytotoxic cancer chemotherapy. Advances in cancer cell biology
fueled by the molecular biology revolution have resulted in the
uncovering of many novel potential molecular targets for cancer
therapy. New anticancer drug discovery and development is now
largely focused on exploiting these new molecular targets, which
encompass oncogenes, tumor s- pressor genes, and their gene
products, as well as targets involved in tumor angiogenesis,
metastasis, survival, and longevity mechanisms. Exploitation of
some of these targets has already yielded fruits and introduced new
paradigms of molecularly targeted cancer therapy into the clinic,
namely, protein kinase in- bition by antibodies or small molecules,
exemplified by Herceptin (R) (trastuzumab), a humanized antibody
targeted against the HER-2 growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase
for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer; and Gleevec, a small
molecule bcr-abl kinase inhibitor for the treatment of chronic
myel- enous leukemia.
We are in an exciting era in the war against cancer, with real
prospects for novel anticancer drugs that are cancer cell-specific
without the toxicities that have been the hallmark of conventional
cytotoxic cancer chemotherapy. Advances in cancer cell biology
fueled by the molecular biology revolution have resulted in the
uncovering of many novel potential molecular targets for cancer
therapy. New anticancer drug discovery and development is now
largely focused on exploiting these new molecular targets, which
encompass oncogenes, tumor s- pressor genes, and their gene
products, as well as targets involved in tumor angiogenesis,
metastasis, survival, and longevity mechanisms. Exploitation of
some of these targets has already yielded fruits and introduced new
paradigms of molecularly targeted cancer therapy into the clinic,
namely, protein kinase in- bition by antibodies or small molecules,
exemplified by Herceptin (R) (trastuzumab), a humanized antibody
targeted against the HER-2 growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase
for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer; and Gleevec, a small
molecule bcr-abl kinase inhibitor for the treatment of chronic
myel- enous leukemia.
|
|