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BRAF Targets in Melanoma electronic resource Biological Mechanisms, Resistance, and Drug Discovery / edited by Ryan J. Sullivan.

Contributor(s): Sullivan, Ryan J [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: Cancer Drug Discovery and DevelopmentPublication details: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2015Description: VIII, 204 p. 26 illus., 21 illus. in color. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781493921430Subject(s): medicine | Cancer Research | Medical Microbiology | Molecular biology | pharmacology | Biomedicine | Cancer Research | Molecular Medicine | Medical Microbiology | Pharmacology/ToxicologyDDC classification: 614.5999 LOC classification: RC261-271Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Melanoma: Historical Context -- Melanoma Pathogenesis -- Molecular Diagnostics and Tumor Mutational Analysis -- Clinical Utility of BRAF-targeted therapy in Melanoma -- The Ethics of Randomized Trials in Oncology -- Parallel and Serial Blockade Strategies in BRAF-Mutant Melanoma -- Targeting the cell cycle and p53 in combination with BRAF-directed therapy -- Combination BRAF-directed therapy and immunotherapy -- Moving Forward: Making BRAF-Targeted Therapy Better.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This volume contains a collection of writings from the leaders in the fields of Molecular Biology and Melanoma Research which will begin to tell the ever-expanding story of the most recent findings, discoveries, and potential of BRAF-directed targets in melanoma. Recent research has shown that BRAF inhibitors are effective for a short period of time, but there is little hope that these drugs as single agents will lead to durable benefit in a majority of patients. Among scientists and researchers who work in drug discovery, there is a lot of interest in the development of molecularly targeted cancer agents. Namely, the identification of a molecular target, the selection of molecules which effectively inhibit this target. What is starkly different about the development of this class of compounds, however, is that the mechanism of action of these agents are not as straightforward as was once previously assumed and the mechanisms of resistance that tumor cells employ to evade complete destruction are unlike any that have been described before. These discoveries in addition to utilization of modern molecular biology techniques have led to a series of hypotheses regarding which other types of molecules could be used in combination with BRAF-inhibitors in hopes of revolutionizing the potential of therapeutics in melanoma.
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Melanoma: Historical Context -- Melanoma Pathogenesis -- Molecular Diagnostics and Tumor Mutational Analysis -- Clinical Utility of BRAF-targeted therapy in Melanoma -- The Ethics of Randomized Trials in Oncology -- Parallel and Serial Blockade Strategies in BRAF-Mutant Melanoma -- Targeting the cell cycle and p53 in combination with BRAF-directed therapy -- Combination BRAF-directed therapy and immunotherapy -- Moving Forward: Making BRAF-Targeted Therapy Better.

This volume contains a collection of writings from the leaders in the fields of Molecular Biology and Melanoma Research which will begin to tell the ever-expanding story of the most recent findings, discoveries, and potential of BRAF-directed targets in melanoma. Recent research has shown that BRAF inhibitors are effective for a short period of time, but there is little hope that these drugs as single agents will lead to durable benefit in a majority of patients. Among scientists and researchers who work in drug discovery, there is a lot of interest in the development of molecularly targeted cancer agents. Namely, the identification of a molecular target, the selection of molecules which effectively inhibit this target. What is starkly different about the development of this class of compounds, however, is that the mechanism of action of these agents are not as straightforward as was once previously assumed and the mechanisms of resistance that tumor cells employ to evade complete destruction are unlike any that have been described before. These discoveries in addition to utilization of modern molecular biology techniques have led to a series of hypotheses regarding which other types of molecules could be used in combination with BRAF-inhibitors in hopes of revolutionizing the potential of therapeutics in melanoma.

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