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In Breast Cancer: Cellular and Molecular Biology Kluwer Academic
Pub lishers, 1988], we tried to present an introduction to the
emerging basic studies on steroid receptors, oncogenes, and growth
factors in the regulation of normal and malignant mammary
epithelium. The response to this volume was superb, indicating a
tremendous interest in basic growth regulatory mechanisms governing
breast cancer and controlling its malignant progres sion. In the
two years since its publication, much new and exciting in formation
has been published and the full interplay of regulatory mechanisms
is now beginning to emerge. We have divided this book into four
sections that we hope will unify important concepts and help to
crystallize areas of consensus and/or disagreement among a diverse
group of basic and clinical scientists working on the disease. The
first section is devoted to studies on oncogenes, antioncogenes,
proliferation, and tumor prognosis. The first chapter, by
Sunderland and McGuire, introduces the characteristics of breast
cancer as studied by patho logists to establish prognostic outcome.
Of particular interest is a new proto oncogene called HER-2 (or
neu), which is rapidly becoming accepted as a valuable new tumor
marker of poor prognosis. The second chapter, by Lee Bookstein and
Lee, introduces the best known antioncogene, the retinoblas toma
antioncogene, whose expression is sometimes lost in breast cancer.
Malignant progression appears to be influenced by the balance of
proto oncogene and antioncogene expression."
Where do you begin to look for a recent, authoritative article on
the diagnosis or management of particular malignancy? The few
general oncology text books are generally out of date. Single
papers in specialized journals are informative but seldom
comprehensive; these are more often preliminary reports on a very
limited number of patients. Certain general journals fre quently
publish good in-depth reviews of cancer topics, and published sym
posium lectures are often the best overviews available.
Unfortunately, these reviews and supplements appear sporadically,
and the reader can never be sure when a topic of special interest
will be covered. Cancer Treatment and Research is a series of
authoritative volumes which aim to meet this need. It is an attempt
to establish a critical mass of oncology literature covering
virtually all oncology topics, revised frequently to keep the
coverage up to date, easily available on a single library shelf or
by a single personal subscription. We have approached the problem
in the following fashion. First, by divid ing the oncology
literature into specific subdivisions such as lung cancer,
genitourinary cancer, pediatric oncology, etc. Second, by asking
eminent authorities in each of these areas to edit a volume on the
specific topic on an annual or biannual basis. Each topic and tumor
type is covered in a volume appearing frequently and predictably,
discussing current diagnosis, staging, markers, all forms of
treatment modalities, basic biology, and more."
The current volume represents the fourth over a period of five
years in our series on Advances in the Cellular and Molecular
Biology of Breast Cancer. The first three volumes were entitled
Breast Cancer: Cellular and Molecular Biology, Regulatory
Mechanisms in Breast Cancer, and Genes, Oncogenes, and Hormones,
respectively. Throughout this series, we have tried to take a broad
look at cutting-edge topics in basic science research into breast
cancer. This attempt has resulted in a wide range of subject
material, including rodent and human model systems, oncogenes,
suppressor genes, growth factors, hormones, tumor-host
interactions, and determinants of metastases. Since our last
volume, research in breast cancer has continued to proceed at an
explosive rate. We hope the current volume will provide the reader
with some of the excitement felt by the editors and authors as we
begin to understand this all-too-common disease. The first section
of this book is devoted to the basic processes of proli feration,
differentiation, and malignant progression of breast cancer. T.l.
Anderson and W.R. Miller lead off with a detailed description of
controls on proliferation in the normal human breast and in breast
cancer. This chapter strongly emphasizes pathological aspects. The
second chapter, by M.R. Stampfer and P. Yaswen, presents a
corresponding viewpoint through a presentation of experiments with
human mammary epithelial cells in culture. The second section of
the book emphasizes the genetic basis for breast cancer onset and
malignant progression. Chapter 3, by M.-C. King and S."
Where do you begin to look for a recent, authoritative article on
the diagnosis or management of a particular malignancy? The few
general oncology textbooks are generally out of date. Single papers
in specialized journals are informative but seldom comprehensive;
these are more often preliminary reports on a very limited number
of patients. Certain general journals frequently publish good
in-depth reviews of cancer topics, and published symposium lectures
are often the best overviews available. Unfortunately, these
reviews and supplements appear sporadically, and the reader can
never be sure when a topic of special interest will be covered.
Cancer Treatment and Research is a series of authoritative volumes
that aim to meet this need. It is an attempt to establish a
critical mass of oncology literature covering virtually all
oncology topics, revised frequently to keep the coverage up to
date, and easily available on a single library shelf or by a single
personal subscription. We have approached the problem in the
following fashion: first, by dividing the oncology literature into
specific subdivisions such as lung cancer, genitourinary cancer,
pediatric oncology, etc.; and second, by asking eminent authorities
in each of these areas to edit a volume on the specific topic on an
annual or biannual basis. Each topic and tumor type is covered in a
volume appearing frequently and predictably, discussing current di
agnosis, staging, markers, all forms of treatment modalities, basic
biology, and more."
Mammary Tumor Cell Cycle, Differentiation and Metastasis is the
fifth volume since 1988 in a series designed to broadly examine
current advances in the cellular and molecular biology of breast
cancer. As in previous volumes, the editors have invited recognized
experts in cutting-edge topics to provide a chapter focused on
their area of research. The editors have turned to the researchers
who study rodent models of the disease and to those who study the
cellular and molecular basis of human breast cancer. The first
section of the book is devoted to new mouse models of mammary
development and tumorigenesis. The second section moves to studies
of human breast cancer and focuses on receptors, signalling, and
the cell cycle. The final section deals with defective tissue
interactions in human breast cancer. We are now in a period of
extremely rapid accumulation of data on the molecular and cellular
biology of breast cancer. These findings are highlighted in
chapters from Mammary Tumor Cell Cycle, Differentiation and
Metastasis: Advances in Cellular and Molecular Biology of Breast
Cancer.
In Breast Cancer: Cellular and Molecular Biology Kluwer Academic
Pub lishers, 1988], we tried to present an introduction to the
emerging basic studies on steroid receptors, oncogenes, and growth
factors in the regulation of normal and malignant mammary
epithelium. The response to this volume was superb, indicating a
tremendous interest in basic growth regulatory mechanisms governing
breast cancer and controlling its malignant progres sion. In the
two years since its publication, much new and exciting in formation
has been published and the full interplay of regulatory mechanisms
is now beginning to emerge. We have divided this book into four
sections that we hope will unify important concepts and help to
crystallize areas of consensus and/or disagreement among a diverse
group of basic and clinical scientists working on the disease. The
first section is devoted to studies on oncogenes, antioncogenes,
proliferation, and tumor prognosis. The first chapter, by
Sunderland and McGuire, introduces the characteristics of breast
cancer as studied by patho logists to establish prognostic outcome.
Of particular interest is a new proto oncogene called HER-2 (or
neu), which is rapidly becoming accepted as a valuable new tumor
marker of poor prognosis. The second chapter, by Lee Bookstein and
Lee, introduces the best known antioncogene, the retinoblas toma
antioncogene, whose expression is sometimes lost in breast cancer.
Malignant progression appears to be influenced by the balance of
proto oncogene and antioncogene expression."
The current volume represents the fourth over a period of five
years in our series on Advances in the Cellular and Molecular
Biology of Breast Cancer. The first three volumes were entitled
Breast Cancer: Cellular and Molecular Biology, Regulatory
Mechanisms in Breast Cancer, and Genes, Oncogenes, and Hormones,
respectively. Throughout this series, we have tried to take a broad
look at cutting-edge topics in basic science research into breast
cancer. This attempt has resulted in a wide range of subject
material, including rodent and human model systems, oncogenes,
suppressor genes, growth factors, hormones, tumor-host
interactions, and determinants of metastases. Since our last
volume, research in breast cancer has continued to proceed at an
explosive rate. We hope the current volume will provide the reader
with some of the excitement felt by the editors and authors as we
begin to understand this all-too-common disease. The first section
of this book is devoted to the basic processes of proli feration,
differentiation, and malignant progression of breast cancer. T.l.
Anderson and W.R. Miller lead off with a detailed description of
controls on proliferation in the normal human breast and in breast
cancer. This chapter strongly emphasizes pathological aspects. The
second chapter, by M.R. Stampfer and P. Yaswen, presents a
corresponding viewpoint through a presentation of experiments with
human mammary epithelial cells in culture. The second section of
the book emphasizes the genetic basis for breast cancer onset and
malignant progression. Chapter 3, by M.-C. King and S."
Where do you begin to look for a recent, authoritative article on
the diagnosis or management of particular malignancy? The few
general oncology text books are generally out of date. Single
papers in specialized journals are informative but seldom
comprehensive; these are more often preliminary reports on a very
limited number of patients. Certain general journals fre quently
publish good in-depth reviews of cancer topics, and published sym
posium lectures are often the best overviews available.
Unfortunately, these reviews and supplements appear sporadically,
and the reader can never be sure when a topic of special interest
will be covered. Cancer Treatment and Research is a series of
authoritative volumes which aim to meet this need. It is an attempt
to establish a critical mass of oncology literature covering
virtually all oncology topics, revised frequently to keep the
coverage up to date, easily available on a single library shelf or
by a single personal subscription. We have approached the problem
in the following fashion. First, by divid ing the oncology
literature into specific subdivisions such as lung cancer,
genitourinary cancer, pediatric oncology, etc. Second, by asking
eminent authorities in each of these areas to edit a volume on the
specific topic on an annual or biannual basis. Each topic and tumor
type is covered in a volume appearing frequently and predictably,
discussing current diagnosis, staging, markers, all forms of
treatment modalities, basic biology, and more."
Mammary Tumor Cell Cycle, Differentiation and Metastasis is the
fifth volume since 1988 in a series designed to broadly examine
current advances in the cellular and molecular biology of breast
cancer. As in previous volumes, the editors have invited recognized
experts in cutting-edge topics to provide a chapter focused on
their area of research. The editors have turned to the researchers
who study rodent models of the disease and to those who study the
cellular and molecular basis of human breast cancer. The first
section of the book is devoted to new mouse models of mammary
development and tumorigenesis. The second section moves to studies
of human breast cancer and focuses on receptors, signalling, and
the cell cycle. The final section deals with defective tissue
interactions in human breast cancer. We are now in a period of
extremely rapid accumulation of data on the molecular and cellular
biology of breast cancer. These findings are highlighted in
chapters from Mammary Tumor Cell Cycle, Differentiation and
Metastasis: Advances in Cellular and Molecular Biology of Breast
Cancer.
Where do you begin to look for a recent, authoritative article on
the diagnosis or management of a particular malignancy? The few
general oncology textbooks are generally out of date. Single papers
in specialized journals are informative but seldom comprehensive;
these are more often preliminary reports on a very limited number
of patients. Certain general journals frequently publish good
in-depth reviews of cancer topics, and published symposium lectures
are often the best overviews available. Unfortunately, these
reviews and supplements appear sporadically, and the reader can
never be sure when a topic of special interest will be covered.
Cancer Treatment and Research is a series of authoritative volumes
that aim to meet this need. It is an attempt to establish a
critical mass of oncology literature covering virtually all
oncology topics, revised frequently to keep the coverage up to
date, and easily available on a single library shelf or by a single
personal subscription. We have approached the problem in the
following fashion: first, by dividing the oncology literature into
specific subdivisions such as lung cancer, genitourinary cancer,
pediatric oncology, etc.; and second, by asking eminent authorities
in each of these areas to edit a volume on the specific topic on an
annual or biannual basis. Each topic and tumor type is covered in a
volume appearing frequently and predictably, discussing current di
agnosis, staging, markers, all forms of treatment modalities, basic
biology, and more."
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