Section 1: Hallmarks of Cancer
1: Douglas Hanahan and Robert A. Weinberg: The hallmarks of
cancer
2: Shujuan Liu and Ahmed Ashour Ahmed: Growth factors and
uncontrolled proliferation
3: Stefan Knapp: Cell signalling pathways
4: Simon Carr and Nicholas La Thangue: Cell cycle control
5: Amanda S. Coutts, Sandra Maniam, and Nicholas La Thangue: Cancer
cell death
6: Yull E. Arriaga and Arthur E. Frankel: Angiogenesis
7: Andrew P. Mazar, Andrey Ugolkov, Jack Henkin, Richard Ahn, and
Thomas V. O'Halloran: Invasion and metastases
8: Sir Walter Bodmer and Jenny Wilding: Genetic instability
9: E. Dikomey, K. Borgmann, M. Kriegs, W. Mansour, C. Petersen, and
T. Rieckmann: DNA repair after oncological therapy
10: Andreas Trumpp: Biology of cancer stem cells
11: Richard D Kennedy, Manuel Salto-Tellez, D. Paul Harkin, and
Patrick G Johnston: Biomarker identification and clinical
validation
12: Campbell SD Roxburgh and Donald C McMillan: Cancer, immunity,
and inflammation
13: Cameron Snell, Kevin C Gatter, Adrian L Harris, Francesco
Pezzella: Cancer and metabolism
Section 2: Etiology and Epidemiology of Cancer
14: Jonathan Samet: Smoking and cancer
15: Chris Boshoff: Viruses
16: Paula A. Oliveira: Chemical carcinogens
17: Klaus Trott: Radiation
18: Ellen Kampman and Franzel van Duijnhoven: Body fatness,
physical activity, diet, and other lifestyle factors
Section 3: Principles of Oncology
19: PG Boelens, CBM van den Broek, and CJH van de Velde: Practice
points for surgical oncology
20: Annekatrin Singer, Stephanie E. Combs, Jürgen Debus, and
Michael Baumann: Practice points for radiation oncology
21: David Kerr, Daniel Haller, and Jaap Verweij: Principles of
chemotherapy
22: David N Church, Rachel S Midgley, and David J Kerr: Delivery of
multidisciplinary cancer care
23: Michael Ong and Udai Banerji: Principles of clinical
pharmacology: Introduction to pharmacokinetics and
pharmacodynamics
24: Dan Sargeant and Qian Shi: Design and analysis of clinical
trials
25: Eric A. Singer: Medical ethics in oncology
26: Jeffrey Peppercorn: Health economic assessment of cancer
therapy
Section 4: Population Health
27: Masoud Samiei: Cancer control: The role of national plans
28: Sarah Goltz and Julian Lob-Levyt: Cancer prevention:
Vaccination
29: Hans-Joerg Senn, Nadir Arber, and Dirk Schrijvers: Cancer
prevention: Chemoprevention
30: Andrew Evans, Simon Herrington, and Robert Steele: Population
cancer screening
31: Henry T. Lynch, Carrie L. Snyder, and Jane F. Lynch (deceased):
Familial cancer syndromes and genetic counselling
Section 5: Support for the cancer patient
32: David Hui and Eduardo Bruera: Supportive palliative care
33: Neil Aaronson and Peter Fayers: Quality of life
34: Rachel L. Yung and Ann H. Partridge: Cancer survivorship and
rehabilitation
Section 6: Disease
35: Christine Chung, Andreas Dietz, Vincent Gregoire, Marco Guzzo,
Marc Hamoir, René Leemans, Jean-Louis Lefebvre, Lisa Licitra, Adel
El-Naggar, Brian O?Sullivan, Bing Tan, Vincent Vandecaveye, Vincent
Vander Poorten, Jan Vermorken, and Michelle Williams: Cancer of the
head and neck
36: Eric Van Cutsem, Christophe M. Deroose, Piet Dirix, Karin
Haustermans, Tony Lerut, Philippe Nafteux, Hans Prenen, and Xavier
Sagaert: Oesophageal cancer
37: Hideaki Bando, Takahiro Kinoshita, Yasutoshi Kuboki, Atsushi
Ohtsu, and Kohei Shitara: Gastric cancer
38: Regina Beets-Tan, Bengt Glimelius, and Lars Påhlman: Rectal
cancer
39: John Zalcberg, Stephen Fox, Alexander Heriot, Jon Knowles, Sam
Ngan, Michael Michael, Kathryn Field, and Iris Nagtegaal: Colon
cancer
40: J. Weitz, M.W. Büchler, Paul D Sykes, John P Neoptolemos,
Eithne Costello, Christopher M Halloran, Frank Bergmann, Peter
Schirmacher, Ulrich Bork, Stefan Fritz, Jens Werner, Thomas
Brunner, Elizabeth Smyth, David Cunningham, Brian R. Untch, and
Peter J. Allen: Pancreatic cancer
41: Graeme J Poston, Nicholas Stern, Jonathan Evans, Priya Healey,
Daniel Palmer, and Mohandas K. Mallath: Hepatobiliary cancer
42: H. Richard Alexander, Jr., Dario Baratti, Terence C. Chua,
Marcello Deraco, Raffit Hassan, Marzia Pennati, Federica Perrone,
Paul H. Sugarbaker, Anish Thomas, Keli Turner, Tristan D. Yan and
Nadia Zaffaroni: Peritoneal mesothelioma
43: Martine Piccart, Toral Gathani, Dimitrios Zardavas, Hatem A.
Azim Jr., Christos Sotiriou, Giuseppe Viale, Emiel J T Rutgers,
Mechthild Krause, Monica Arnedos, Suzette Delaloge, Fabrice Andre,
and Felipe Ades: Cancer of the breast
44: Richard Pötter, Shujuan Liu, Bolin Liu, Sebastien Gouy, Sigurd
Lax, Eric Leblanc, Philippe Morice, Fabrice Narducci, Alexander
Reinthaller, Maximilian P Schmid, Catherine Uzan, and Pauline
Wimberger: Gynaecological cancers
45: John Fitzpatrick, Asif Muneer , Jean de la Rosette, and Thomas
Powles: Genitourinary cancer
46: Rafal Dziadziuszko, Michael Baumann, Tetsuya Mitsudomi, Keith
M. Kerr, Solange Peters, and Stefan Zimmermann: Lung cancer
47: Rebecca Bütof, Axel Denz, Gustavo Baretton, Jan
Stöhlmacher-Williams, and Michael Baumann: Neoplasms of the
thymus
48: Andrea S. Wolf, Assunta De Rienzo, Raphael Bueno, Lucian R.
Chirieac, Joseph Corson, Elizabeth H. Baldini, David Jackman, Ritu
Gill, Walter Weder, Isabelle Opitz, Ann S. Adams, and David J.
Sugarbaker: Pleural mesothelioma
49: John F Thompson, Richard A Scolyer, and Richard F Kefford: Skin
cancer: melanoma
50: Diona L. Damian, Richard A. Scolyer, Graham Stevens, Alexander
Menzies, and John F. Thompson: Skin cancer: non-melonoma
51: Adele K. Fielding, Charles G. Mullighan, Dieter Hoelzer, Eytan
M. Stein, Ghada Zakout, Martin S. Tallman, Ross Levine, Yishai
Ofran, Jacob M. Rowe, and Ross L. Levine: Acute leukemia
52: Hemant Malhotra, Lalit Kumar, Pankaj Malhotra, Devendra Hiwase,
and Ravi Bhatia: Chronic leukemias
53: Charlotte Pawlyn, Faith Davies, and Gareth Morgan: Myeloma
54: Frank Kroschinsky, Friedrich Stölzel, Stefano A. Pileri, Bjoern
Chapuy, Rainer Ordemann, Christian Gisselbrecht, Tim Illidge, David
C. Hodgson, Mary K. Gospodarowicz, Christina Schütze, and Gerald
Wulf: Lymphomas
55: Alessandro Gronchi, Angelo P. Dei Tos, and Paolo G. Casali:
Sarcomas of the soft tissue
56: Puneet Plaha, Allyson Parry, Pieter Pretorius, Michael Brada,
Olaf Ansorge, and Claire Blessing: Cancer of the central nervous
system
57: Daniel G. Ezra, Geoffrey E. Rose, Jacob Pe'er, Sarah Coupland,
S. Seregard, G.P.M. Luyten, and Annette C. Moll: Cancer of the eye
and orbit
58: David Kerr, Andrew Weaver, Anthony P. Weetman, Oliver Gimm,
Ashley Grossman, Petra Sulentic, Bertram Wiedenmann, Ulrich-Frank
Pape, John Wass, Angela Rogers, and W de Herder: Endocrine
cancers
59: Nicholas Pavlidis and George Pentheroudakis: Cancer of unknown
primary site
Index
Highly Commended in the Oncology category of the British Medical Association Book Awards 2016.
David Kerr has made a sustained and internationally recognised
contribution to cancer care and research in the field of medical
oncology over the past three decades. He has published over 400
papers in high profile journals, authored over twenty books and has
been awarded four prestigious, international research prizes,
including the NHS's first Nye Bevan award for Innovation. His
scientific standing has been recognised by election as Fellow of
the Royal College
of Physicians, Fellow of Academy of Medical Sciences, President of
the European society of Medical Oncology (2009-2011) and Founding
Fellow of the European Academy of Cancer Sciences.
`Review from previous edition The Oxford Textbook of Oncology is a
classic and fresh approach to the field. It is a must for all
libraries and all those who like to have a single up-to-date
reference book that contains sufficient detail for the clinician in
all subspecialties: surgery and chapters are sufficiently details
to provide a reference for trainees in the field.
'
Oncology, Volume 63, 2002
`The Oxford Textbook of Oncology covers virtually the entire
spectrum of malignant diseases in adults and children. It meets
very high editorial and production standards: the organization,
illustrations, and eye-pleasing typography are outstanding... I
have high praise for this textbook.
'
NEJM, Volume 347, Number 2, 2002
`Under new editorship, the second edition is far more than an
updated version of the first...the prose in the Oxford Textbook is
exemplary...this textbook is unique among its peers in giving the
sense that the authors are addressing the reader personally...an
exception level of qualityELRespect for the evidence-based medicine
is apparent throughout the text...illustrative and anatomical
drawing...of remarkable high quality...excellent discussion of
doctor-patient communication in relation OT genetic counselling,
psychological issues, and terminal cancers.
'
JAMA, Volume 287, Issue 24, 2002
`An outstanding work and an impressive achievement.
'
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 2002
`A landmark referenceELIt sets new standards for publishing in
oncology offering a ground-breaking innovative approach to the
filed combined with the quality, accuracy , and intellectual rigour
you have come to expect from the world's most prestigious reference
publisher.
'
Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy, 2002
`This comprehensive textbook of oncology is the first new major
textbook on cancer to appear in a decade and is designed for a
broad audience of clinicians, oncologists in training, and
academics. The coverage is comprehensive...The overall appearance
of the book is outstanding. It is a welcome combination of
epidemiology, aspects of basic science, pharmacology and radiation
therapy that trainees will fine a nice change...should enjoy a
wide
readership...because of its appealing design and comprehensive
approach to oncology. It is the most user-friendly comprehensive
text currently available. The pathology, basic science,
epidemiology, and radiation therapy
sections are all presented with extreme clarity.
'
Doody's Journal , 2002
`I recommend this book highly to all oncology and oncologists in
training as a thorough, informative, and readable reference. Every
large intuitional library and every oncology library should have
it.
'
NEJM, 2002
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |