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'The Immortal
Cell; Why cancer research fails'
Gerald
B. Dermer
Avery Publishing Group USA 1994,
212 pages
ISBN 0-89529-582-2.
Introduction From The Author
More than 50,000
North Americans die of cancer every year. Yet while billions of
dollars have been spent on research over the course of forty years,
we still have no effective treatments for the vast majority of advanced
malignancies. Why are we loosing the war on cancer? In his new book,
The Immortal Cell; Why Cancer Research Fails, Dr.
Gerald B. Dermer, a dedicated cancer researcher, provides a clear,
accurate, and startling account of perhaps the biggest blunder in
the history of science and medicine.
Scientists
depend on cells growing in petri dishes in their laboratories to
give them information on human diseases. These petri dish cells,
called cell lines, serve as models for human cancer cells. Cell
lines are cultures of cells that are derived from tumors or normal
tissue. But unlike any real tissue, normal or cancerous, these cells
are immortal - they can grow forever on the bottoms of petri dishes.
And it is these manmade creations that have become the favorite
cancer model in the majority of research laboratories throughout
the world. But what if these immortal cells have been providing
misleading - or, worse, completely incorrect - information, heading
scientists in the wrong direction?
The Immortal
Cell tells an alarming story of unsound science, and the
pressures that lead scientists to do unsound work. It carefully
details how researchers have squandered time, money, and lives in
pursuing an enemy of their own making. It lets you in on what is
really going on in the war against cancer.
Dr. Gerald
B. Dermer received his B.A. in biophysics, M.A. in genetics, and
Ph.D. in cell biology from the University of California at Los Angeles.
After two years of post-docteral research in biochemistry at the
University of Lund in Sweden, Dr. Dermer returned to Los Angeles
and the Pathology Department of the Hospital of the Good Samaritan.
There he began his research on human cancer, joining the faculty
of the University of Southern California School of Medicine.
After twelve
successful years in clinical and basic research, Dr. Dermer moved
to the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, where he
continued laboratory research for three more years. For the past
ten years, Dr. Dermer has pursued his interests in cancer, pathology,
and biotechnology as an independent consultant and writer.
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