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Medicine

D-Index
90
Citations
32200
World Ranking
12143
National Ranking
6229

Overview

J. Martin Brown is a researcher affiliated with Stanford University in the United States. Their work primarily spans the field of Medicine, with significant contributions in several subfields such as Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine, Oncology, Biomedical Engineering, Genetics, and Immunology.

The scientist's research focuses on multiple topics including Bone health and treatments, Glioma Diagnosis and Treatment, Empathy and Medical Education, Innovations in Medical Education, Problem and Project Based Learning, Prostate Cancer Treatment and Research, and Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment.

J. Martin Brown has published papers in a diverse range of venues, which include Creative Nursing, Current Opinion in Supportive and Palliative Care, BMC Pulmonary Medicine, International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, and Clinical Cancer Research.

  • Applying Design Thinking in Health Care: Reflections of Nursing Honors Program Students (2020, Creative Nursing)
  • Assessment of the benefits of bone modifying agents in the management of advanced breast, prostate, and lung cancers (2025, Current Opinion in Supportive and Palliative Care)
  • Retropharyngeal abscess in a post-lung transplant cystic fibrosis patient with prior cervical fusion: a case study (2020, BMC Pulmonary Medicine)
  • In Regard to Nam et al (2021, International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics)
  • Correction: Macrophage Exclusion after Radiation Therapy (MERT): A First-in-Human Phase I/II Trial using a CXCR4 Inhibitor in Glioblastoma (2023, Clinical Cancer Research)

Frequent collaborators of J. Martin Brown include Sigrid Ladores, Seema Nagpal, Sophia B. Chernikova, Lawrence D. Recht, and Nancy P. Wingo.

Best Publications

  • Exploiting tumour hypoxia in cancer treatment.

    J. Martin Brown;William R. Wilson

  • Association of reactive oxygen species levels and radioresistance in cancer stem cells

    Maximilian Diehn;Robert W. Cho;Neethan A. Lobo;Tomer Kalisky

  • The role of apoptosis in cancer development and treatment response.

    J. Martin Brown;Laura D. Attardi

  • Inhibition of vasculogenesis, but not angiogenesis, prevents the recurrence of glioblastoma after irradiation in mice

    Mitomu Kioi;Hannes Vogel;Geoffrey Schultz;Robert M. Hoffman

  • Hypoxia: Importance in tumor biology, noninvasive measurement by imaging, and value of its measurement in the management of cancer therapy

    Jeffrey M. Arbeit;J. Martin Brown;K. S.Clifford Chao;J. Donald Chapman

  • Pancreatic tumors show high levels of hypoxia.

    Albert C Koong;Vivek K Mehta;Quynh T Le;George A Fisher

  • The Tumor Radiobiology of SRS and SBRT: Are More Than the 5 Rs Involved?

    J. Martin Brown;David J. Carlson;David J. Brenner

  • SR-4233: a new bioreductive agent with high selective toxicity for hypoxic mammalian cells.

    Elaine M. Zeman;J.Martin Brown;Marilyn J. Lemmon;V.Kate Hirst

  • Matrix metalloproteinase-9 is required for tumor vasculogenesis but not for angiogenesis: Role of bone marrow-derived myelomonocytic cells

    G-One Ahn;J. Martin Brown

  • Exploiting the hypoxic cancer cell: mechanisms and therapeutic strategies

    J.Martin Brown

  • Tumor hypoxia in cancer therapy.

    J Martin Brown

  • Cells at intermediate oxygen levels can be more important than the "hypoxic fraction" in determining tumor response to fractionated radiotherapy.

    Bradly G. Wouters;J. Martin Brown

  • Oxygen in Human Tumors: Correlations between Methods of Measurement and Response to Therapy: Summary of a Workshop Held November 19-20, 1992, at the National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland

    Helen B. Stone;J. Martin Brown;Theodore L. Phillips;Robert M. Sutherland

  • The Promise of Targeting Macrophages in Cancer Therapy

    J. Martin Brown;Lawrence Recht;Samuel Strober

  • Inhibition of Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) enhances tumor response to radiation by reducing myeloid cell recruitment

    G-One Ahn;Diane Tseng;Cho-Hwa Liao;Mary Jo Dorie

  • Tumor microenvironment and the response to anticancer therapy.

    J Martin Brown

  • Transcriptional response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to DNA-damaging agents does not identify the genes that protect against these agents.

    Geoff W. Birrell;James A. Brown;H. Irene Wu;Guri Giaever

  • Oxygen in Human Tumors: Correlations between Methods of Measurement and Response to Therapy

    Helen B. Stone;J. Martin Brown;Theodore L. Phillips;Robert M. Sutherland

  • SR-2508: A 2-nitroimidazole amide which should be superior to misonidazole as a radiosensitizer for clinical use

    J Martin Brown;J Martin Brown;Ning Y Yu;Ning Y Yu;Dennis M Brown;Dennis M Brown;William W Lee;William W Lee

  • Integrating phenotypic and expression profiles to map arsenic-response networks

    Astrid C Haugen;Ryan Kelley;Jennifer B Collins;Charles J Tucker

Frequent Co-Authors

Amato J. Giaccia
Amato J. Giaccia Stanford University
Albert C. Koong
Albert C. Koong The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
William R. Wilson
William R. Wilson University of Auckland
Bradly G. Wouters
Bradly G. Wouters Princess Margaret Cancer Centre
Quynh-Thu Le
Quynh-Thu Le Stanford University
William A. Denny
William A. Denny University of Auckland
David J. Brenner
David J. Brenner Columbia University
Daniel A. Bloch
Daniel A. Bloch Stanford University
Maximilian Diehn
Maximilian Diehn Stanford University
Irving L. Weissman
Irving L. Weissman Stanford University

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