The Search for new anticancer drugs
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Search for new anticancer drugs
(Cancer biology and medicine, CABM 03)
Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1992
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Most of the anti-cancer drugs in use today were discovered by happy accident rather than design, yet the rational design of better anti-cancer drugs remains a cherished goal, and one of the most important challenges facing medical science.
This book represents a compilation of views and progress reports which illustrate the diversity of approaches to the problem. Recent research has confirmed the belief that critical genetic changes are at work in cancer cells. The genome, then (DNA in biochemical terms), surely represents a critical target for specific chemotherapy of cancer, and several chapters address the issue of attacking DNA, gene targetting, and the like. Others deal with principles of rational design, exploitation of novel modalities and targets, or the nuts and bolts of antitumour drug testing. While no attempt has been made to provide a comprehensive coverage of this wide-ranging and vitally important subject, the present volume in the series will provide much food for thought.
Table of Contents
1. Is there a future for the small molecule in developmental cancer chemotherapy?.- 2. The role of medicinal chemistry in the discovery of DNA-active anticancer drugs: from random searching, through lead development, to de novo design.- 3. In vitro systems for anticancer drug testing.- 4. Tumour hypoxia: challenges for cancer chemotherapy.- 5. Computer modelling and drug design.- 6. Differentiation inducers and their potential use in the treatment of acute myelogenous leukaemia.- 7. Angiosuppression.- 8. Preclinical evaluation and phase I trials.- 9. Evaluation: how should a new treatment be evaluated?.- 10. Oncogene-targeted antisense oligonucleotides: tools for genetic analysis or new anticancer drugs?.
by "Nielsen BookData"