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As oncology changes from a largely empirical endeavor to a science in which diagnosis and therapy are guided and, indeed, defined by the genetic alterations in a patient's tumor, books such as this one will become increasingly important. The ultimate necessity will be to move from simplistic classifications of tumors according to histologic features or alleged organ of origin toward an understanding of tumors as the result of the combinatorial action of deregulated or mutated genes. For this reason, molecular oncology will need to establish an efficient format to convey its core information: methods of defining which genes are important
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