S
Samuel Hellman
Researcher at University of Chicago
Publications - 157
Citations - 19248
Samuel Hellman is an academic researcher from University of Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radiation therapy & Breast cancer. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 156 publications receiving 18869 citations. Previous affiliations of Samuel Hellman include The Advisory Board Company & University of Illinois at Chicago.
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Hodgkin's Disease: Evidence for a Tumor-Associated Antigen
TL;DR: Perisplenic nodes and splenic tumor nodules were obtained from two patients with Hodgkin's disease and used to immunize individually assigned rabbits and identified a tumor-associated antigen by indirect immunofluorescence in cryostat sections.
Journal Article
Differential Effects of Cytotoxic Agents on Hematopoietic Progenitors
TL;DR: The data from the recovery curves and Rs support the notion of stem cells being heterogeneous with regard to self-renewal capacity, and which drugs cause significant proliferative damage.
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Radiation-induced tumour necrosis factor-α expression: clinical application of transcriptional and physical targeting of gene therapy
Ralph R. Weichselbaum,Donald Kufe,Samuel Hellman,Henrik S. Rasmussen,C. Richter King,Paul H. Fischer,Helena J. Mauceri +6 more
TL;DR: Preclinical and early phase I clinical testing indicates that effective concentrations of TNFalpha can be delivered to the tumour site without significant systemic exposure or toxic effects and the rationale, mechanistic basis, preclinical data, and preliminary clinical findings for this new treatment model are summarized.
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An initial report of a radiation dose-escalation trial in patients with one to five sites of metastatic disease.
Joseph K. Salama,Steven J. Chmura,Neil Mehta,Kamil M. Yenice,Walter M. Stadler,Everett E. Vokes,Daniel J. Haraf,Samuel Hellman,Ralph R. Weichselbaum +8 more
TL;DR: Patients with low-volume metastatic cancer can be identified, safely treated, and may benefit from radiotherapy.
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Limited surgery and radiotherapy for early breast cancer.
Harris,Samuel Hellman,Kinne Dw +2 more