The Philadelphia chromosome

a mutant gene and the quest to cure cancer at the genetic level

303 pages

English language

Published July 14, 2013 by The Experiment, LLC, Distributed by Workman Pub. Co., The Experiment.

ISBN:
978-1-61519-067-6
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OCLC Number:
820450840

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5 stars (1 review)

This work discusses the history of a genetic mutation, discovered in 1959, that causes chronic myeloid leukemia, and traces the research and breakthroughs that led to the creation of a drug that makes this once-fatal illness now treatable. It focuses on what is widely viewed as the 'poster child' of rational drug development in the cancer research world. The history of the founding of a genetic mutant chromosome in the indication of Chronic myeloid leukemia disease, and the subsequent development of "Gleevec," is the keynote of this publication.

3 editions

Review of 'The Philadelphia chromosome' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I started medical school only a few years after imatinib was successfully approved by the FDA. One of the most memorable lessons from those first few years was about CML and imatinib's use for it. I was dazzled by the very logical chain from translocation to fusion protein to proto-oncogene to inhibitor to cure. There are only a handful of moments that direct someone's life, and this was one of mine: I decided to do cancer genetics (it wasn't until years later that I would drop the "cancer" half of the career plan.) I spent two years in a cancer genetics lab, got involved in one of the first off-label uses of dasatinib and spent time speculating about all of the tyrosine kinase inhibitors of the future. And I've lived in the future, where even having walked away from cancer, I got myself intertwined with lung cancer and EGFR inhibitors …

Subjects

  • Mutation (Biology)
  • Genetic aspects
  • Imatinib
  • Cancer
  • Chronic myeloid leukemia
  • History
  • Research