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Scientists love
the stories of serendipity in which they begin studying one topic and
stumble onto something entirely different that proves to be medically
important. In our website exhibit called "A Thin Blue Line," we tell the
story of research at the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development that sought to develop a diagnostic tool for one type of cancer.
The investigators knew that one hormone was excreted only when a woman was
pregnant or a person had a particular type of tumor. In 1978, the assay they
developed to detect this hormone was adapted by commercial firms into the
home pregnancy test, which for the first time permitted women to learn in
the privacy of their homes whether or not they were pregnant.
Since enactment in 1986 of the Technology Transfer Act, such
collaborations with industry have been encouraged even more strongly. |