Home
About
Overview
Sharing Data
ORCID
Help
History (32)
Bare Versus Hair: Do Pubic Hair Grooming Preferences Dictate the Urogenital Microbiome?
Glembatumumab vedotin for patients with metastatic, gpNMB overexpressing, triple-negative breast cancer ("METRIC"): a randomized multicenter study.
Activity of XL647 in clinically selected NSCLC patients (pts) enriched for the presence of EGFR mutations: Results from Phase 2.
What Chicago community organizations needed to implement COVID-19 interventions: lessons learned in 2021.
GLORIA: phase III, open-label study of adagloxad simolenin/OBI-821 in patients with high-risk triple-negative breast cancer.
See All 32 Pages
Find People
Find Everything
Login
to edit your profile (add a photo, awards, links to other websites, etc.)
Edit My Profile
My Person List (
0
)
Return to Top
Search Result Details
Back to Search Results
This page shows the details of why an item matched the keywords from your search.
Search Results
Ratain, Mark J.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to
Ratain, Mark J.
Item Type
Name
Concept
Biological Availability
Academic Article
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of oltipraz as a chemopreventive agent.
Academic Article
Oral chemotherapy: rationale and future directions.
Academic Article
A phase I study of suramin with once- or twice-monthly dosing in patients with advanced cancer.
Academic Article
Inconsistent labeling of food effect for oral agents across therapeutic areas: differences between oncology and non-oncology products.
Academic Article
Importance of food effects for oral oncology drugs.
Academic Article
Dose-ranging pharmacodynamic study of tipifarnib (R115777) in patients with relapsed and refractory hematologic malignancies.
Academic Article
Vemurafenib oral bioavailability: an insoluble problem.
Academic Article
Food Effect Studies for Oncology Drug Products.
Academic Article
Addition of grapefruit juice (GJ) to increase the bioavailability of high-dose weekly rapamcyin (R).
Search Criteria
Biological Availability