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Medicine

Meet the Doctor Trying To Use the Blood of Ebola Survivors To Create a Cure 33

An anonymous reader points out this article about Dr. James Crowe, who is trying to use the blood of Ebola survivors to develop a cure. "For months, Vanderbilt University researcher Dr. James Crowe has been desperately seeking access to the blood of U.S. Ebola survivors, hoping to extract the proteins that helped them overcome the deadly virus for use in new, potent drugs. His efforts finally paid off in mid-November with a donation from Dr. Rick Sacra, a University of Massachusetts physician who contracted Ebola while working in Liberia. The donation puts Crowe at the forefront of a new model for fighting the virus, now responsible for the worst known outbreak in West Africa that has killed nearly 7,000 people. Crowe is working with privately-held drugmaker Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc, which he said will manufacture the antibodies for further testing under a National Institutes of Health grant. Mapp is currently testing its own drug ZMapp, a cocktail of three antibodies that has shown promise in treating a handful of Ebola patients."
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Meet the Doctor Trying To Use the Blood of Ebola Survivors To Create a Cure

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  • by See Attached ( 1269764 ) on Monday December 22, 2014 @06:35PM (#48656353)
    This is awesome. Real medicine. Not treatment, not a profit motive. Just building on what protected one patient with the hope of helping others be rid of the disease. Go Dr Crowe, Go Mapp! We need less focus on monetization and more on misery.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by sjames ( 1099 )

      I assure you, there is a profit motive to the development. The plasma donor is the one with no profit motive.

      It's still good to see an approach that has yielded success built upon.

      • The donors are making about $80 per donation, which in a poor country is good money. And it is whole blood, not plasma.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      They didn't blind themselves, the monkeys died from euthanasia not ebola, and the clinical score protocol used to decide when euthanasia was required was not published. There is essentially no evidence allowing us to distinguish between whether the drug worked vs. the researchers being biased.

      "This study was not blinded"
      "Animals were scored daily for signs of disease, in addition to changes in food and water consumption"
      "the clinical limit for IACUC mandated euthanasia"
      http://go.nature.com/oY8pGI

    • There is always profit motive. Always. It's just myopic to define profit only in terms of currency.

      Getting a profit of medicinal development is still profit. Getting a profit of money is fine too. Pretending that this is being done without profit because you happen to like the form the profit takes is ridiculous.

      • Perhaps altruism is not the right word (... benefits another at its own expense...), perhaps the focus on better survival of society as we know it. It could have been much worse, not to diminish the awful toll already taken. Good point about profit. The growth in capability is still profit .... been distracted by the incessant justification by financial return. Now.. lets turn this around and look at superbugs before those get nastier yet. Lets characterize profit then as advancement in medical methods to
  • ZMapp (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 22, 2014 @06:45PM (#48656395)

    I've watched way too many zombie movies to feel comfortable with the drug's name.

    • I've watched way too many zombie movies to feel comfortable with the drug's name.

      Heck, never mind the name, this is the beginning of the plot of more zombie movies than I can count.

      • Re:ZMapp (Score:4, Informative)

        by Progman3K ( 515744 ) on Monday December 22, 2014 @07:18PM (#48656575)

        I've watched way too many zombie movies to feel comfortable with the drug's name.

        Heck, never mind the name, this is the beginning of the plot of more zombie movies than I can count.

        You two aren't just whistlin' Dixie; that's the major plot of the Charlton Heston classic The Omega Man.

        Then again, that one chick-zombie was pretty cool, so if that's a possible side-effect, then I say it's win-win.

  • Lets meet him when he actually finds a cure. That should be his motivation for media attention, not premature sensationalist profiles.
  • It's nice to see somebody trying to do something without big pharma trying to rape us for billions in R&D for anything it seems nowadays.

  • Um, no thanks.

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