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Biotech Medicine

Scientists Selectively Trigger Suicide In Cancer Cells (scitechdaily.com) 47

Long-time Slashdot reader Baron_Yam quotes SciTechDaily: A team of researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine reveals the first compound that directly makes cancer cells commit suicide while sparing healthy cells. The new treatment approach was directed against acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells but may also have potential for attacking other types of cancers.... AML accounts for nearly one-third of all new leukemia cases and kills more than 10,000 Americans each year. The survival rate for patients has remained at about 30 percent for several decades, so better treatments are urgently needed.
The team's computer screened a million compounds to determine the 500 most likely to bind to the "executioner protein" in cells. They then synthesized them all in their lab and evaluated their effectiveness.
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Scientists Selectively Trigger Suicide In Cancer Cells

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  • ... otherwise, good news.

    • by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Sunday October 15, 2017 @12:26PM (#55372831) Homepage

      With a 1/3 death rate, some side effects would likely be acceptable. That being said, the reason chemo patients lose their hair is because chemo kills all fast growing cells. Viagra also affects cells in other areas like the eyes. Triggering cell death could get really bad in a hurry if it unintentionally killed all of a class of cell in the body vital to survival.

      • OK, the way I read "survival rate for patients has remained at about 30 percent" is that 7 out of 10 patients die...
        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          Yup. You read that right.

          Although we all die sooner or later. The only question is how long we can put off our date with the reaper.

    • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Sunday October 15, 2017 @01:06PM (#55372969)

      If I read the article correctly, this compound can only trigger cell death in a cell already primed to die - the problem with cancer cells being they get primed but resist reception of the final 'go' signal. It really shouldn't kill any cells that aren't going to off themselves shortly anyway.

      Then again, IANA oncology researcher.

      • This is correct, this is describing induced apoptosis. It's probably the best way to kill cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone. Better still, apoptosis is controlled cell death, so they die 'cleanly' versus necrosis when the cells just fall apart.
    • If the side effects are "50% chance of death," it could still be better than the treatment options we have now.
    • Considering the side effects of the current treatment and its success rates, I'd say the side effects of this can be rather horrible before it's no longer a suitable replacement...

    • I should have been clearer (but I was in a hurry to win the coveted first-post award:-). Hopefully:

      a) No side effects, not because it might not be worth it even with side effects up to a direct mortality rate lower than the disease it cures, but because hey, side effects generally suck. If I'm going to expend valuable "hope", I might as well hope to get a real live pony as to get a tiny stuffed unicorn. (OK, not the best metaphor -- I really don't want a real live pony because I'm not that fond of horses

  • Call the helpline.

  • by darthsilun ( 3993753 ) on Sunday October 15, 2017 @12:35PM (#55372871)

    Would it be grants from the U.S. Government by any chance? Kinda sounds like it.

    From http://www.einstein.yu.edu/new... [yu.edu]:

    Funding for this research was provided by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health (R01CA178394), and awards from the Sidney Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research, the Gabrielle’s Angels Foundation for Cancer Research, and the Pershing Square Sohn Cancer Research Alliance. Partial support was also provided by the Albert Einstein Cancer Center, which is funded by the NCI.

    I'm waiting for the other shoe to drop. The one where the protocol is patented and licensed to a private company that will charge obscene amounts of money for the medicine.

    Your tax dollars working hard for you.

    • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

      Someone has to actually test the thing. That doesn't come cheap. Until governments start doing this on their own (including those socialist utopias), then individuals will have to risk large amounts of their money. They won't do that for free.

      • by Bryansix ( 761547 ) on Sunday October 15, 2017 @01:55PM (#55373185) Homepage
        That's not the point. The point is the reason cancer medication is said to cost a lot is because of research and development. However in this case, public funds paid for the R&D and as such, the resultant product should no be patented; but it will be anyways.
        • The patent itself is not the problem.
          The question is a fair licensing schema.

          Actually, the government should patent it, and hand out licenses for 10% of turn over or something. That would beat the amount of taxes any company would pay by a magnitude.

        • It should be patented. It should just be patented by the U.S. Government, and royalties paid by the companies who use the info to bring a product to market.

          I could even see some kind of special patent type for the government, maybe perpetual _until_ it pays for itself (including wages, etc.), then is free for all to use. (But being free to use would then maybe have some sort of price restriction.. No price restriction, you keep paying the government.) That way, the very expensive long term basic research

    • Govt backed research works kind of like venture capital, the government assumes no risk (or employees) beyond the cash itself and doles it out to promising proposals. This works pretty well, but you're right that the govt could ask for more in return than they generally do... but without the grant program we'd be left with just what VC would pay for, which would be baldness cures and boner pills. So we're still better off in that we have new cancer drugs, even if they end up expensive. One issues with so
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I really prefer the other method of cultivating your cells in a lab and teach them how to fight the cancer, then use them in your body, that is more safe and makes you stronger, not suicidal. And that method is already been used around the world.

  • ...and the big oops moment becomes the opening scene from Prometheus...
  • Cannabis does this already. Naturally. With little harm and few 'side effects'

Genetics explains why you look like your father, and if you don't, why you should.

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