Cancer biomarkers represent a revolutionary advance toward personalised cancer treatment, promising therapies that are tailored to subgroups of patients sharing similar generic traits. Notwithstanding the optimism driving this development, biomarkers also present an array of social and ethical questions, as witnessed in sporadic debates across different literatures. This review article seeks to consolidate these debates in a mapping of the complex terrain of ethical and social aspects of cancer biomarker research. This mapping was undertaken from the vantage point offered by a working cancer biomarker research centre called the Centre for Cancer Biomarkers (CCBIO) in Norway, according to a dialectic move between the literature and discussio...
Biomedical ethics developed in the late twentieth century as a challenge to the self- regulatory eth...
The biomedical paradigm of personalised precision medicine - identification of specific molecular ta...
Why would a cancer patient agree to test a drug that might not be effective on their own disease? An...
AbstractCancer biomarkers represent a revolutionary advance toward personalised cancer treatment, pr...
Cancer biomarkers represent a revolutionary advance toward personalised cancer treatment, promising ...
This open access book reflects on matters of social and ethical concern raised in the daily practice...
Cancer Biomarkers are the key to unlocking the promise of precision oncology, selecting which patien...
Biomarkers are potentially powerful tools for use in research and regulation. Their derivation from ...
International audienceThe proliferation of biomarkers has raised concerns regarding the possibility ...
Introduction: Precision oncology aims to tailor diagnostics and treatment to patients’ individual bi...
Biomedicine is often presented as the driving force behind improvements in cancer care, with genomic...
Over the past two decades, molecular technologies have transformed the landscape of cancer diagnosis...
During the last decade, testing the patient’s biomarker status prior to the administration of corres...
Current research projects using human biomarkers in their search for better knowledge on the interac...
The biomedical paradigm of personalised precision medicine - identification of specific molecular ta...
Biomedical ethics developed in the late twentieth century as a challenge to the self- regulatory eth...
The biomedical paradigm of personalised precision medicine - identification of specific molecular ta...
Why would a cancer patient agree to test a drug that might not be effective on their own disease? An...
AbstractCancer biomarkers represent a revolutionary advance toward personalised cancer treatment, pr...
Cancer biomarkers represent a revolutionary advance toward personalised cancer treatment, promising ...
This open access book reflects on matters of social and ethical concern raised in the daily practice...
Cancer Biomarkers are the key to unlocking the promise of precision oncology, selecting which patien...
Biomarkers are potentially powerful tools for use in research and regulation. Their derivation from ...
International audienceThe proliferation of biomarkers has raised concerns regarding the possibility ...
Introduction: Precision oncology aims to tailor diagnostics and treatment to patients’ individual bi...
Biomedicine is often presented as the driving force behind improvements in cancer care, with genomic...
Over the past two decades, molecular technologies have transformed the landscape of cancer diagnosis...
During the last decade, testing the patient’s biomarker status prior to the administration of corres...
Current research projects using human biomarkers in their search for better knowledge on the interac...
The biomedical paradigm of personalised precision medicine - identification of specific molecular ta...
Biomedical ethics developed in the late twentieth century as a challenge to the self- regulatory eth...
The biomedical paradigm of personalised precision medicine - identification of specific molecular ta...
Why would a cancer patient agree to test a drug that might not be effective on their own disease? An...