Repurposing Drugs To Tackle Cancer (theguardian.com) 53
sackvillian writes: Many Slashdotters are aware of the infamous thalidomide birth defect crisis. What might come as a surprise is the incredible success that thalidomide and some analogs have recently found as treatments for cancer, ulcers, lupus, and more. In fact, thanks in part to their success, there's a growing research movement that's attempting to treat cancer with other existing drugs that are commonly used for totally unrelated conditions. Drugs as common as aspirin, which is in the early stages of a clinical trial that will involve over 10,000 cancer patients, are being used. As described in the article written by The Guardian, at least one major international collaboration has taken this approach: The Repurposing Drugs in Oncology (ReDO) project. However, as most of the drugs are long since off-patent, researchers are having to be creative in obtaining funding for their work. Last week, Vice President Joe Biden unveiled a public database for clinical data on cancer that aims to help researchers and doctors better tailor new treatments to individuals.
Re:Thalidomide (Score:4, Informative)
Thalidomide is still manufactured because it is now a standard treatment for leprosy.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pu... [nih.gov]
Outcomes (Score:2)
At least 15 years ago someone started a giant, long-term hard outcomes study to track food and drugs for outcomes of cancer and stroke and heart disease. What ever happened to that? The idea being nobody knew if there weren't a few good or bad items in the mass of stuff people take.
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Finding a cure for either will violate His plan for the human race.
Unless his plan is to test if we're stupid enough to believe that shit.
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Finding a cure for either will violate His plan for the human race.
Unless his plan is to test if we're stupid enough to believe that shit.
And when you can't find Christians who believe that shit, you can find Greens who do.
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We get it. You are incapable of understanding that groups of people don't all act as one and don't all share the exact same opinions and understanding of complicated issues.
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Since the ESP machine I use to delve into the individual Green mind is in the shop, I have to rely on the publicly expressed opinions and manifestos of the group.
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success (Score:2)
You know, we'd study it, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
"We'd study these things, but nobody is going to get filthy rich off of it so there's no real incentive to spend the money."
Wait - how much money is spent by the government and NFP cancer foundations on research? And we can't get a share of that to study promising medicines?
Damn, we really are fucked as a society.
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I almost wonder if we'd have readily-available cures for polio, measles, etc. if they hadn't already been available in the early 20th century.
What happened to creating helpful drugs for the purpose of helping people, rather than making money?
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I don't have much good to say about Bill Gates, but some of his charitable contributions are substantial.
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It does not take tons of money to research and develop a drug. It takes a lot of money to take a drug through animal & human trials. The drug (as in, the molecule) is already determined long before any of that money is spent. The cost (risk) element arises purely because most drugs (like 95%) fail to get all the way through human trials. This cost is amortized across the drugs that do work. That has nothing to do with capitalism per se, that's a simple numbers game - it works the same under sociali
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There are lots of people working to create helpful drugs; what the article is about is testing existing drugs to see if they might do other things, and clinical trials are expensive. Talk to Congress and get them to fund the NIH more if you want them to do that.
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America has the healthcare system it deserves, it seems. If "politics as team sport" is more important than "functioning government", this is the sort of crap that will plague the US for generations. If a demonstrably good idea is despised because of which political team suggests it, the system is a failure, and democratic in name only.
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That is become we are dumb as fenceposts. We watch reality TV and deeply care who the bachelorette has "relations" with. We go to church on Sunday and never doubt that there really was an actual serpent in an actual garden of eden around 6000 years ago right before a really big flood that rose to cover the top of mount everest in only 40 days and nights of rain (water rising at a rate of one inch or so a minute, globally). We truly believe that this flood wiped out all of the dinosaurs, and that all of t
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It has also ruled corporations are not only people
False. Citizens United merely said that because people individually have freedom of speech, people working together in a group (in this case, a corporation - interesting fact, the ACLU and many unions are nonprofit corporations as well) should also have it. Corporations do not, however, enjoy protections under the Fifth Amendment (self-incrimination in particular).
Big Pharma (Score:2)
Add R&D for new antibiotics to that list.
While there are a few defenders of the industry on this site, the truth is they aren't in the curing business any more; they're in the maintenance (read addiction) business.
They are, in the street parlance, Drug Dealers.
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Clinical trials are fucking expensive, man. Somewhat less expensive if the drug is already approved for other uses, but you're still talking probably upwards of $100M per drug to show that it works. The NIH budget isn't big, especially if you want them to keep funding basic and translational (not clinical) research at the same time.
At one point during the early discussions of the TPP trade deal, a thought occured to me: Why don't we have an international agreement for reciprocity in medical treatments? Clinical trials are, as you say, "fucking expensive, man," but they're many times more expensive when you have to go through variations of the same trials over and over for different markets.
I was recently talking with my father-in-law. He told me about how his mom and sister had both been to Germany for a particular neck surgery tha
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There are times, however, where the FDA will look at the trial that approved something in the EU and just say "good enough", but it's on a case by case basis.
The medical regulatory agency in Japan makes
BCG Treatment is excellent (Score:2)
Speaking of treatments that are awesome, Bacillus Calmette-Guerin therapy is fantastic.
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/b... [cancer.org]
It's surprising that there are VERY few places where this treatment is performed. The reason often has to do with the fact that it's labor-intensive and there is no surgery involved.
Why is it that (Score:2)
a large percentage of our society can find the money to help pay for the ridiculous incomes enjoyed by major sports figures and their leagues, and movie / music stars and the MAFIAA, but cancer "researchers are having to be creative in obtaining funding for their work" because patent expiration renders that research insufficiently profitable for Big Pharma? It seems to me that, as a society, our values are seriously skewed in favour of paying for bread and circuses, and the latest bit of techno-shiny, inste
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You mixed two things that shouldn't be mixed:
1) independent cancer researchers are having trouble getting funding
2) pharmaceutical companies are private businesses
The blame for #1 does not fall on pharmaceutical companies
Cancer is a billion-dollar business... (Score:2)
Dozens of companies make money because of cancer. Even "cancer research" companies make money because of cancer.
Finding a cure would be like killing their own cash cow. Who in their right mind would do that?