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Craig R. Fairchild

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  32
Citations -  3565

Craig R. Fairchild is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Paclitaxel & Cell culture. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 32 publications receiving 3471 citations. Previous affiliations of Craig R. Fairchild include University of California, San Diego & Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

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Journal Article

BMS-247550: a novel epothilone analog with a mode of action similar to paclitaxel but possessing superior antitumor efficacy.

TL;DR: Efficacy data demonstrate that BMS-247550 has the potential to surpass Taxol in both clinical efficacy and ease of use (i.e., less frequent treatment schedule and/or oral administration).
Journal Article

Expression of Anionic Glutathione-S-transferase and P-Glycoprotein Genes in Human Tissues and Tumors

TL;DR: Comparison of paired specimens from the same patient indicated that GST pi expression was increased in many tumors relative to matched normal tissue, and while the human anionic GST displays 85% nucleotide and amino acid sequence homology to the rat anionic isozyme, it is markedly less related to human basic GST isozymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of Candidate Molecular Markers Predicting Sensitivity in Solid Tumors to Dasatinib: Rationale for Patient Selection

TL;DR: It is implicate that dasatinib may represent a valuable treatment option in this difficult-to-treat population of patients with resistance or intolerance to prior therapy and to test this hypothesis, clinical studies are under way to determine the activity of d asatinib in these patients.
Journal Article

Isolation of Amplified and Overexpressed DNA Sequences from Adriamycin- resistant Human Breast Cancer Cells

TL;DR: In situ hybridization studies demonstrated that the human P-glycoprotein gene sequence was found on chromosome 7q21.1 in normal human lymphocytes and that amplified DNA sequences isolated from the Adriamycin-resistant MCF-7 cells by the in-gel hybridization technique were linked to thehuman P- glycoprotein sequences in the homogeneously staining regions in the AdrR cells.