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Annals of Oncology 2004 15(9):1303-1304; doi:10.1093/annonc/mdh364
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© 2004 European Society for Medical Oncology

A word in your ear: the 2004 Annals of Oncology prizes

David J. Kerr

University of Oxford, Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Oxford, UK

The first 10% of the full text of this article appears below.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the English word genome is derived from the German Genom, first used by the cytogeneticist Hans Winkler in 1920 to describe the haploid chromosome set of an organism. Notably, the word Genom was derived, by analogy, from Mitom, coined by cytologist Walther Flemming in 1882 to describe the reticular structures of the cell collectively.

 Next to these old-timers, the proteome is a neonate, younger even than that other baby, the World Wide Web, having been first used by Wasinger et al. in the journal Electrophoresis . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Annals of Oncology Prize for translational science

Annals of Oncology Prize for phase I studies

Annals of Oncology Prize for phase II studies

Annals of Oncology Prize for phase III studies


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