Paperback : HK$114.00
One in two of us will develop cancer at some point in our lives and yet many of us don't understand how cancers arise. How many different kinds of cancer are there? What treatments are available? What does the future hold in terms of developing new therapies? This book demystifies cancer by explaining the underlying cell and molecular biology in a clear and accessible style. It answers the questions commonly asked about cancer such as what causes cancer and how cancer develops. It explains how DNA makes proteins and how mutations can corrupt those proteins. It also gives an overview of current therapies and how treatments may advance over the next decades, as well as explaining what actions we can take to help prevent cancer developing. Understanding Cancer is an accessible and engaging introduction to cancer biology for any interested reader.
One in two of us will develop cancer at some point in our lives and yet many of us don't understand how cancers arise. How many different kinds of cancer are there? What treatments are available? What does the future hold in terms of developing new therapies? This book demystifies cancer by explaining the underlying cell and molecular biology in a clear and accessible style. It answers the questions commonly asked about cancer such as what causes cancer and how cancer develops. It explains how DNA makes proteins and how mutations can corrupt those proteins. It also gives an overview of current therapies and how treatments may advance over the next decades, as well as explaining what actions we can take to help prevent cancer developing. Understanding Cancer is an accessible and engaging introduction to cancer biology for any interested reader.
1. Painting a clear picture; 2. Ancient history; 3. Counting cancer; 4. From DNA to protein; 5. What is a cell?; 6. Mutations; 7. Causes of cancer that can be controlled; 8. Causes of cancer that are difficult to control, accidents … and other things; 9. Treating cancer by chemotherapy; 10. The road to utopia?
Explains, in simple terms, the molecular events that drive cancers, current therapies and potential future treatments.
Robin Hesketh has been a member of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Selwyn College for over 40 years, working on cancer biology. He has published over 100 research papers, a textbook on cancer (Introduction to Cancer Biology, Cambridge, 2013) and popular science books (Betrayed by Nature, Palgrave, 2012). He has spoken on cancer and has run a blog on the topic of cancer for the general public since 2011.
'How often have we attended a lecture or opened a book to find that
within minutes we are smothered by complicated facts that are way
beyond our understanding? There has been no simple introduction.
The speaker/author is so involved in the topic that they could no
longer see out of the intellectual hole that they had dug for
themselves. If ever a book was written to dispel this fault, then
this is the one, as Robin Hesketh has managed to provide a
remarkably clear and readable account of the science behind
cellular behaviour and faults that lead to the development of
cancer. The book reads like a novel, and I found that I could
hardly put it down. The literary style is at times light-hearted
with humorous analogies.' Robert Whitaker, anatomist, University of
Cambridge
'Understanding Cancer presents a carefully crafted, clear and
concise book on aspects of cancer; a disease of importance to us
all. Most readers will come to Robin Hesketh's book with questions
about cancer. Understanding Cancer will not disappoint. The most
usual questions and answers are presented in the first chapter and
ways of reducing the risk of some cancers are suggested later. This
book puts cancer into a historical and very interesting context; it
then explores cancer, its biochemistry and functioning in an
approachable way. Information is given about the latest treatments
and the science behind them. This very readable book contains
something for everyone. It is positioned, and very adequately
fills, the gap between personal accounts by patients of their
experiences, and more advanced medical and cell biology texts.
Understanding Cancer is well researched and greatly recommended.'
David Archer, schools liaison officer, British Society for Cell
Biology
'Understanding Cancer is a fascinating and engaging perspective on
the evolution of cancer research and treatment. Dr Hesketh provides
insight into the key clinicians and scientists, following their
discoveries in clinical care and research. He overviews the likely
mutagenic causes of cancer spurring on the oncogenic transitions
leading to a cancer cell that can replicate uncontrollably,
highlights new avenues in cancer research, and conveys that
preventive measures and advances in early cancer detection could
make an impact on cancer incidence and patient outcomes/survival.
This book is certainly a triumph and a must-read for all current
and future scientists, physicians at any stage of their
professional careers and anyone interested in cancer research and
the quest for effective anti-cancer treatments.' David Lyden, David
Lyden, cancer researcher and paediatric oncologist, Weill Cornell
Medicine, Cornell University
'… this is an enjoyable and compelling read and includes a list of
references appropriate for each chapter and a helpful index …
Highly recommended.' J. M. Miller, Choice
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