Good genes gone bad: a short history of vaccines and biologics
Material type: TextPublication details: Penguin Random House India Pvt. Ltd. Haryana 2021Description: xxxvi, 202 pISBN:- 9780670096039
- 615.309 CHI
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks | Non-fiction | 615.309 CHI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 004400 |
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613.26 DJO Serve to win: | 613.7 BEC The secret to superhuman strength | 613.7148 WAI The art of learning: an inner journey to optimal performance | 615.309 CHI Good genes gone bad: | 615.851 DIS Becoming supernatural: | 616 GAW Better: a surgeon's notes on performance | 616.462061 BIK Why we get sick: |
The field of biotechnology has evolved over the past four decades, developing medicines which are curing diseases. But this journey of success has been tough and arduous, built upon the shoulders of major failures.
Good Genes Gone Bad highlights seven such colossal failures in drug development-all of which culminated in the development of novel drugs-weaving together various analogies through the stories and thus allowing the reader to understand complex biological phenomena. These stories include treatment of medical conditions such as genetic clotting disorder (haemophilia), childhood-diarrhoea (rotavirus vaccine), preventing HIV infection, activation of the immune systems to treat cancer, gene therapy for treatment of diseases caused by gene-defects/mutations, cell therapy for treatment of leukaemias, and finally the success of Biocon’s approval of the first biologic drug for breast cancer.
Written by the former R&D head of Biocon, India’s largest pharmaceutical company, Good Genes Gone Bad is a fascinating look at the complex world of medicine and drug development, providing the readers with a sense of magnitude of challenges and the extent of difficulty that it takes to make novel medicines.
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