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BTK Inhibitors as Sensitizing Agents in Solid Tumors. Cancer Sensitizing Agents for Chemotherapy

  • Book

  • March 2023
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5658449
BTK Inhibitors as Sensitizing Agents in Solid Tumors provides a thorough review of mechanisms of multi-drug resistance in cancers, describing, in detail, the mechanisms, current studies and future directions of the role of BTK inhibitors in overcoming therapy resistance in cancer, including resistance to chemotherapy, targeted therapies and immunotherapy. The book discusses topics such as mechanisms of therapy resistance in cancer cells, BTK inhibitors in paclitaxel, docetaxel, platinum, BRAF and radio resistance. In addition, the book discusses ibrutinib and its role in immunotherapy resistance, novel BTK inhibitors and future perspectives.

This book is a valuable resource for cancer researchers, oncologists, graduate students, and members of the biomedical field who are interested in the potential of BTK inhibitors as sensitizing agent to resistant cancers.

Table of Contents

1. Overview of BTK pathway
2. Overview of BTK inhibitors and their clinical utility [1st gen, 2nd gen]
3. Mechanisms of therapy resistance in cancer cells
4. BTK inhibitors in paclitaxel and docetaxel resistance
5. BTK inhibitors in Platinum resistance
6. BTK inhibitors in BRAF resistance
7. BTK inhibitors in radio-resistance
8. Ibrutinib beyond BTK inhibition and role in immunotherapy resistance
9. Novel BTK inhibitors and future perspectives

Authors

Robert Dreicer Professor of Medicine and Urology, Associate Director for Clinical Research,Deputy Director, University of Virginia Cancer Center, Section Head of Medical Oncology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Co-Director, Paul Mellon Urologic Cancer Institute, Charlottesville, VA, USA. Robert Dreicer, MD, MS, FASCO, MACP received his medical degree from the University of Texas-Houston and a Master of Science from the University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Following his oncology fellowship, he joined the faculty at University of Iowa, achieving tenure and serving as the associate director of the division of haematology/oncology. He was recruited to Cleveland Clinic, where he served as chair of the department of solid tumor oncology from 2006-2014, before joining UVA Cancer Center in 2015. His research interests are in novel therapeutic approaches for urologic cancer including prostate, urothelial and kidney cancers. He serves as member of the Medical Oncology Test Writing Committee of the American Board of Internal Medicine and is member of the editorial board of New England Journal of Medicine's Journal Watch Hematology/Oncology. Dreicer has been named for many years to Top Doctors in America, America's Best Doctors and America's Top Doctors for Cancer. Varinder Kaur Assistant Professor, Dept of Internal Medicine, Division of Hematology and Oncology, University of Virginia, USA. Dr Varinder Kaur MD, FACP has expertise in haematology and medical oncology, including clinical application of ibrutinib in its varied roles. She is a clinical trialist at University of Virginia, with particular focus on melanoma and head-neck cancers, immune-oncology, and vaccine trials. She has authored several high-quality publications including with rare side effects and resistance mechanisms for ibrutinib. She mentors clinical fellows and residents. She is a member of scientific review committee of Oncology Research Information Exchange Network and has reviewed grant applications for the same. She has served as a member for American Society of Clinical Oncology Systemic Therapy guidelines for melanoma committee and ASCO/ABIM test material development subcommittee, as well as a member of ASCO Education Book Review Panel. Al-Ola A. Abdallah Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine; Director, Plasma Cell Disorder Clinic,Division of Hematologic Malignancies and Cellular Therapeutics, University of Kansas Medical Center, USA. Dr. Al-Ola Abdallah MD is currently Assistant Professor of Medicine and the director of the Plasma Cell Disorder Clinic for the Division of Hematological Malignancies and Cellular Therapy (HMCT). Recently he was also appointed as the Educational Medical Director for the Division. Dr. Abdallah currently works as principal investigator on many investigator-initiated and pharmaceutical-sponsored clinical trials. His research interests include multiple myeloma, smoldering myeloma, amyloidosis, immunotherapy and CAR-T cell for myeloma and CLL, with a focus on improving patient outcomes specifically patients with high-risk subsets of plasma cell dyscrasias and health- related quality of life in myeloma patients.