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american on to cancer cure |
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09-01-2006, 08:06 PM
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#1
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Junior Chatterbox
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Scotland, U.K
Posts: 1,147
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american on to cancer cure
have you heard about the yanks who modified cell to fight destroy cancerous ones? its not perfected yet
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Nice packet of Crunchy Nut you got here. Pretty expensive, as I recall

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09-02-2006, 03:34 AM
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#2
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John O' Scots.
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: City Of Wonder.
Posts: 38,731
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How interesting.
You could've given some detail on what you've heard, instead of this dismal post with nothing for other users to comment and discuss about.
And to answer your question: no i've not heard anything about this yet, but I will keep an ear open to hear anything.
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'Cause we were both young, when I first saw you. 
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09-02-2006, 12:34 PM
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#3
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Junior Chatterbox
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Scotland, U.K
Posts: 1,147
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yeah i could ave but im lazy =P
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Nice packet of Crunchy Nut you got here. Pretty expensive, as I recall

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09-02-2006, 12:38 PM
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#4
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I talk too much!
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: ...in ur dreams...
Posts: 1,731
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Ah They Found The Cure For Cancer Ages Ago. There's Just Too Much Money To Be Made From These Half Pie Treatments Like The One You Stated. It's A Conspiracy I Tell Ye!!!
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Gene Therapy As a Cancer Cure |
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09-03-2006, 05:34 AM
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#5
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Premium Members Rule
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: South Devon nr Cornwall
Posts: 430
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Gene Therapy As a Cancer Cure
Quote:
Originally Posted by sharlene
have you heard about the yanks who modified cell to fight destroy cancerous ones? its not perfected yet
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I think this is what your trying to tell us about......
Genetically altered immune cells wiped out tumors in two men with a deadly form of skin cancer and kept the patients disease-free for at least 18 months, U.S. scientists said on Thursday.
Fifteen patients did not respond to the treatment, however, and the researchers and other experts said more work was needed to make it more effective.
Still, the findings were welcomed as evidence that cancer patients can be successfully treated using gene therapy, a troubled field that has been hindered by safety concerns. Scientists voiced hope the approach could work for other cancers.
In the new study, researchers at the National Cancer Institute infused 17 advanced melanoma patients with their own white blood cells that had been removed and genetically engineered to fight tumors. The cancer was eliminated in two male patients, the researchers said.
"The tumors went away and both of the patients are now completely disease-free over a year and a half later," Dr. Steven Rosenberg, chief of surgery at the NCI, said in an interview.
Before the experiment, the patients had advanced skin cancer that was not helped by standard therapies and they were expected to live just three to six months, he said.
Writing in the journal Science, the researchers said the white blood cells had been armed with genes to spark production of proteins called T-cell receptors. Those receptors recognized molecules on the melanoma cells and directed the white blood cells to destroy the cancer, they said.
In a 52-year-old man, a tumor in his armpit disappeared and another on the liver shrunk enough to be surgically removed. He remained disease-free 19 months after treatment, the study said.
Another patient, a 30-year-old man, had a lung tumor recede and showed no signs of disease 18 months later.
Other gene therapy researchers said the results were a major step forward, but the technique needed to be improved so more patients would benefit.
"This certainly is a significant technical advance that is going to fuel more interest ... and more enthusiasm, I hope, among researchers," said Dr. Michel Sadelain, director of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center's somatic cell engineering laboratory.
But he added it was "undeniable the response here is rather disappointing."
Savio Woo, a professor at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine and a past president of the American Society of Gene Therapy said the researchers "need to do it in more patients and get better response rates, and when that happens we can all pop the champagne."
Scientists have touted gene therapy as holding great promise for a range of ailments, but safety problems have set the field back. One experiment cured two French "bubble boys" with a rare immune disorder, but later gave them leukemia, and an 18-year-old died in a 1999 gene therapy experiment.
Rosenberg said there were no side effects from the melanoma gene therapy. It was administered with the drug interleukin-2, which can cause fluid retention, he said.
The researchers said they hope the same approach can fight breast, lung and other cancers. They are seeking regulatory approval to test the technology in patients with other cancers, Rosenberg said.
Soon there maybe a complete cure for all cancers
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