Annals
Established in 1927 by the American College of Physicians
:
Advanced search
box Article
 arrow  Table of Contents                
space
box Services
 arrow  Send comment/rapid response letter
space
 arrow  Notify a friend about this article
space
 arrow  Alert me when this article is cited
space
 arrow  Add to Personal Archive
space
 arrow  Download to Citation Manager
space
 arrow  ACP Search                        
space
 arrow  Get Permissions
space
box Google Scholar
 arrow  Search for Related Content
space
box PubMed
 arrow  PubMed                        
space

LITERATURE OF MEDICINE

Reviews and Notes: Gene Therapy: A Handbook for Physicians

1 March 1995 | Volume 122 Issue 5 | Page 398


Gene Therapy: A Handbook for Physicians
space

Kenneth W. Culver. 117 pages. New York: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.; 1994. $44.00.

Gene therapy has been featured on the nightly television news and in national magazines, and now, Dr. Kenneth Culver has written a book on the subject for physicians. Culver was on the team at the National Institutes of Health that did the first clinical trials of gene therapy in 1990. The team infused into two patients with adenosine deaminase deficiency their own T lymphocytes, which had been corrected in the laboratory by the introduction of a normal copy of the human adenosine deaminase gene. Culver describes this exciting first attempt in one chapter and covers the potential uses of gene therapy for cancer and nonmalignant diseases in two other chapters. He also reviews the basic biology of DNA, the ways in which disease-specific genes can be identified, and the way genes are placed into cells.

Despite the breadth of this small book, it is not clear which "physicians" Dr. Culver is addressing. Much of the book is too advanced for physicians that have been in practice and away from medical research for many years, but it is too superficial for those actively involved in medical research. Especially disappointing are the figures, which for many readers should be the most informative part of the book. Culver concludes, however, with five important appendixes that will be invaluable for the general reader; they include a listing of all approved (as of 1 January 1994) clinical gene therapy protocols, an excellent glossary of terms, and a list of the chromosomal locations of all identified human gene diseases. This book may benefit physicians and others interested in gene therapy who want to learn more than what is available from the general media.





box Article
 arrow  Table of Contents                
space
box Services
 arrow  Send comment/rapid response letter
space
 arrow  Notify a friend about this article
space
 arrow  Alert me when this article is cited
space
 arrow  Add to Personal Archive
space
 arrow  Download to Citation Manager
space
 arrow  ACP Search                        
space
 arrow  Get Permissions
space
box Google Scholar
 arrow  Search for Related Content
space
box PubMed
 arrow  PubMed                        
space


 Home | Current Issue | Past Issues | In the Clinic | ACP Journal Club | CME | Collections | Audio/Video | Mobile | Subscribe | Tools | Help | ACP Online