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Medicine

Optical Mouse Inventor, Infoseek Founder Hunts For a Covid Cure (ieee.org) 93

Steve Kirsch has been interested in repurposing drugs since he was diagnosed with a rare blood cancer years ago. In an interview with IEEE Spectrum, he talks about his efforts to raise funds for Covid research, to get the word out about promising drugs, and to light a fire under the FDA. "If these guys were [working] in Silicon Valley, they'd be fired," he says. Specifically, Kirsch believes that fluvoxamine will be a game changer for treating Covid-19, as it's an inexpensive, easy-to-take pill with few side effects and has proven to prevent severe illness and death from the coronavirus. Here's an excerpt from the interview he had with IEEE Spectrum: Kirsch: We applied for an Emergency Use Authorization from the FDA [for fluvoxamine] in late January. Lately, we've been just trying to find out how that's going, like, 'What do you guys think? Can we have a conversation? We've got new data.' But they won't talk to us, they say it's in process, that we'll hear from them soon, likely in five weeks from submitting our request. But five, six weeks have come and gone, and we've heard nothing back on our application. Meanwhile, people are dying. If these guys were [working] in Silicon Valley, they'd be fired.

Spectrum: And you got banned from Medium for writing about it.

Kirsch: It's a Catch-22, you can't talk about it until it works but it can't work until you talk about it. I wrote on my Medium blog that fluvoxamine was successful in treating Covid, and that doxazosin [another drug, used to treat high blood pressure among other things] has a 75 percent chance of preventing hospitalization. I was reporting actual results of peer-reviewed studies. In response, Medium removed six years of blogs that I'd written about technology and banned me for life. In my appeal, I said there was no evidence that disputed what I said, and Medium never produced any evidence in response.

Spectrum: You did get covered on 60 Minutes. [On March 7, the news magazine reported on the successful use of fluvoxamine off label to treat a COVID-19 outbreak at the Golden Gate Fields thoroughbred racetrack, with lots of puns about long shots and dark horses.]

Kirsch: Yes, but you could easily watch that 60 Minutes story and believe that we need more data before people should start using fluvoxamine. But a panel of key opinion leaders from the NIH, CDC, and academia met in January and recommended that fluvoxamine be added to the NIH guidelines. They also recommended that doctors should talk to patients about using fluvoxamine for COVID in a process known as "shared decision making." And If you look at the website c19early.com, which rates the drugs with the best evidence, you'll see that the highest-rated FDA-approved drug is fluvoxamine. We shouldn't be ignoring it. Instead of doing nothing, we should be using the drug with the best evidence so far. If you were drowning and someone threw you a life preserver that had only been used 20 times, you don't throw it back complaining there isn't enough evidence that it works.

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Optical Mouse Inventor, Infoseek Founder Hunts For a Covid Cure

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  • by LeeLynx ( 6219816 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @03:16AM (#61219778)

    "If these guys were [working] in Silicon Valley, they'd be fired,"

    Very true. If the last few years have taught us anything, it's that concerns for things like safety, human life, and verification are *not* welcome in the cutting edge of tech.

    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by boudie2 ( 1134233 )
      And if there's anything else we can gather from the past few years is that there are no shortage of liars in the world. Who can you believe in 2021? I'd say almost nobody.
      • And if there's anything else we can gather from the past few years is that there are no shortage of liars in the world. Who can you believe in 2021? I'd say almost nobody.

        I've been thinking about this a lot over the past couple of months. I've decided that a reverse Bayes inference, of sorts, might be a good first-level rule to apply.

        I look at some of the reporting and ask: "who is telling the biggest lies?". The biggest liars are then automatically discounted, and I hold the opposite position as likely true before delving deeper.

        Two examples from recent articles:

        Richard Stallman is accused of lots of things he didn't actually do, the biggest ones are that he's a pedophile,

    • I mean if they were also working in Silicon Valley we'd have a new variant of COVID vaccines every day, once a month on Tuesday notes would come out saying how they have tweaked the formula to reduce the amount of side effects, and you'd be going to the doctor not knowing what you will get, if it will work, or if the drug just randomly caused your little toe to fall off because a BX (Body eXperience) expert decided we don't use our little toes enough anyway.

  • by Martin Blank ( 154261 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @03:38AM (#61219804) Homepage Journal

    ...it's an inexpensive, easy-to-take pill with few side effects and has proven to prevent severe illness and death from the coronavirus.

    The linked study covered 152 patients, 80 getting the drug and 72 a placebo, a size that is a long way from proving its efficacy. Key points from the abstract:

    Clinical deterioration occurred in 0 of 80 patients in the fluvoxamine group and in 6 of 72 patients in the placebo group (absolute difference, 8.7% [95% CI, 1.8%-16.4%] from survival analysis; log-rank P=.009). The fluvoxamine group had 1 serious adverse event and 11 other adverse events, whereas the placebo group had 6 serious adverse events and 12 other adverse events.

    This suggests something good, but it's a very small number of results. The conclusions even say they need a larger study to establish clinical efficacy:

    However, the study is limited by a small sample size and short follow-up duration, and determination of clinical efficacy would require larger randomized trials with more definitive outcome measures.

    On top of those, the experiences were self-reported, which doesn't nullify results but it does make them less reliable, though the researchers tried to address that with repeated phone calls and follow-ups for medical records. And as for the c19early.com website, fluvoxamine has two studies covering 277 patients, presumably including this one, meaning the other was even smaller.

    Maybe fluvoxamine is a good drug to use with COVID patients, but the evidence is kind of thin right now.

    • Lack of evidence showing its effectiveness is not evidence that it's ineffective.
      Clearly it needs further study, but censoring people who talk about it is only going to delay studies. Who's going to volunteer for a study if they aren't aware of it?

      Aside from proving effectiveness, perhaps the main purpose of studying and approving drugs is to detect if there are any serious side effects.
      As this drug is already approved for other purposes, the side effects studies have already been done. The FDA approved it in 1994 so there are also over 20 years of actual patients taking the drug in addition to the original studies, so the possible side effects are well known.

      The fact that the side effects are well known and people have been taking this drug for 20+ years would be enough to convince a lot of people to volunteer for an effectiveness study, or for sick people to potentially take the drug just on the chance it might work.

      • No but in medicine you do have to prove efficacy. There is a method for doing this with larger and larger sample sizes in trials.

      • by Martin Blank ( 154261 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @05:30AM (#61219940) Homepage Journal

        The side effects for indicated use are well-known. The side effects for off-label use, especially where new or unusual drugs may be in play, may not be well-known. Rushing to use a drug with well-known side effects is how we got the hydroxychloroquine debacle, which at a minimum led to shortages for people who actually needed it for other diseases and may have caused harm in COVID patients getting it because of those known side effects.

        • by sinij ( 911942 )

          The side effects for indicated use are well-known. The side effects for off-label use, especially where new or unusual drugs may be in play, may not be well-known.

          Indicated and off-label use produce exactly the same physiological effects. Unless off-label use includes different dosage, how are side effects would become different? Please explain your rationale.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Tech bro suffers from inverse Dunning-Kruger again.

    • by SandorZoo ( 2318398 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @07:33AM (#61220074)

      This suggests something good, but it's a very small number of results. The conclusions even say they need a larger study to establish clinical efficacy

      Eric Lenze, the author of the study, seems to be running a phase 3 trial [clinicaltrials.gov], so hopefully more evidence will be forthcoming.

    • Not a reason to ban a guy's Medium account, though. (Although to be frank, he is probably better off without one).

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        During the pandemic companies were erring on the side of caution with unproven medical claims. They were likely concerned that it could turn into another hydroxychloroquine debacle.

        • They were likely concerned that it could turn into another hydroxychloroquine debacle.

          What hydroxychloroquine debacle? I didn't see a debacle, I saw scientists saying "hydroxychloroquine might be a cure" then after larger studies, saying it wasn't.

          The real debacle was the mask debacle, where scientists said, "don't wear masks, they don't help," then later saying "wear a mask."

          • Early evidence suggested that hydroxychloroquine might be effective in treating serious COVID cases (which is not the same thing as a cure for COVID). People jumped on that and began getting their doctors to prescribe it to prevent getting COVID (when most of the studies were for treating extant COVID) even though its efficacy was not yet established. This caused shortages for people who actually did need it, including those with lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.

            The mask issue was because they didn't know at

            • The mask issue was because they didn't know at the time how effective masks in general were against it other than N95

              That's not really true haha, we knew that they were effective in in April. People have been using these kinds of masks with effectiveness against pandemics for decades.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Maybe fluvoxamine is a good drug to use with COVID patients, but the evidence is kind of thin right now.

      Then write a rebuttal on Medium and show how he's wrong.

      Disappearing him from Medium just makes it look like you are afraid and have nothing to back up your own side of things.

      • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

        Maybe fluvoxamine is a good drug to use with COVID patients, but the evidence is kind of thin right now.

        Then write a rebuttal on Medium and show how he's wrong.

        "Evidence is thin" is not the same as "he's wrong."

        In any case, since he was banned from Medium and all of his previous posts were deleted, "writing a rebuttal on Medium" would be a one-sided argument, since you woule be "rebutting' an argument that is not there to be read, and he is banned from replying.

        Disappearing him from Medium just makes it look like you are afraid and have nothing to back up your own side of things.

        He disappeared from Medium because of Medium's action, not his.

        This is the downside of the modern "the media are private companies not government, so they can ban anybody they like and you can't do anythi

        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          How about...don't read Medium because they do stupid shit like this. When we continue to support bad behavior, we'll get more of it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        If only rebuttals actually worked. How many times were claims about hydroxychloroquine rebutted and yet people still insisted it worked and sought it out, causing problems for themselves (heart problems) and others (lupus and RA patients need it).

        The "marketplace of ideas" doesn't magically fix these problems. The invisible hand of the market rarely fixes anything.

        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          There's nothing wrong with that. A rebuttal isn't always correct, but people deserve to hear all sides of the issue when they're important. Some of us occasionally even change our minds.

  • by ewanm89 ( 1052822 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @04:10AM (#61219854) Homepage
    Really? Lets look at that optical mouse of his:

    He invented and patented an early version of the optical mouse.

    The first two optical mice, first demonstrated by two independent inventors in December 1980, had different basic designs.

    Like all early optical mice. their debut product relied on a special metallic and reflective mousepad printed with a square grid of grey and blue tracking lines.

    The other type, invented by Richard F. Lyon of Xerox, used a 16-pixel visible-light image sensor with integrated motion detection on the same nâ'type (5 Âm) MOS integrated circuit chip.

    A surface-independent coherent light optical mouse design was patented by Stephen B. Jackson at Xerox in 1988.

    So yeah, his was one of several early versions, he patented it so others couldn't use it for 20 years, and this without pointing out that modern optical mice are descendants of the rival and superior dresign out of Xerox by Lyon and improved by Jackson which he did not beat the invention of.

    • his was one of several early versions, he patented it so others couldn't use it for 20 years

      Wait, what? No. I mean, yes, but then no. Kirsch and two others founded Mouse Systems with their own money [skirsch.com], and their mouse was the one picked up by Sun and used ubiquitously from the SunVME era through literally until the UltraSparc machines, which had normal ball mice. And those might have been Mouse Systems mice too for all I know. But my 3/260 (later upgraded to 4/260) had one of these early optical mice with the reflective aluminum mousing surface. Those mice would also work on a sheet of ordinary whit

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Kirsch's design would always require a special mouse pad too, it could never have worked on arbitrary surfaces. Lyon's system was much more advanced because it could work with arbitrary surfaces - the special mouse pad was only because the early versions needed a lot of reflected light and contrast before better sensors became available.

  • by joe_n_bloe ( 244407 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @04:59AM (#61219916) Homepage

    If there's one thing we learned in 2020, isn't it that only health and science professionals should be opining on COVID "cures"?

    But maybe a little zinc, fluvoxamine, and "the light inside" will clear the 'rona right up.

    • But maybe a little zinc, fluvoxamine, and "the light inside" will clear the 'rona right up.

      *Stares awkwardly at the 2kg of hydroxychloroquine sitting beside me*. F**K!

    • That's why I only trust college drop-out Bill Gates for my medical advice.
  • But before we get out hopes up, let's wait for the Altavista team to weigh in.
  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Wednesday March 31, 2021 @05:49AM (#61219972)

    If I understand things correctly, he posted on Medium saying "Fluvoxamine should be used to treat Covid because these studies say it works for treating Covid" when in fact the studies he cited did not say anything of the sort (and in fact everything was suggesting that the numbers involved were not enough to draw any conclusions one way or the other from said studies).

    Assuming that's true then Medium should absolutely have removed these posts. Telling people that a drug is good for treating a particular condition when the evidence to back up that claim isn't there is definitely not good.

    • That's lunacy - someone should not be removed from the internet for legal speech. It's so unfortunate that so many people, who may be otherwise decent, have come to believe that such draconian policies are good and normal. We should be free to write whatever we want on the internet.
      • It’s because there are no public areas in social media, it’s all private. There isn’t a town square, it’s a private plaza you can only stay in at their pleasure. You can’t force association nor can you force people to host speech. The only ones in America able to be forced to host a free speech platform is the government, and that’s only because of the first amendment.
      • Is Medium under any government mandate to publish content?

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      If I understand things correctly, he posted on Medium saying "Fluvoxamine should be used to treat Covid because these studies say it works for treating Covid" when in fact the studies he cited did not say anything of the sort

      No, the studies he quote did say something of the sort. They said that initial results looked promising, but larger studies were needed to confirm.

      (and in fact everything was suggesting that the numbers involved were not enough to draw any conclusions one way or the other from said studies).

      Saying "initial studies show it seems to work, but we need to confirm this with a study of a larger number of patients" is not the same as "nothing of the sort".

    • > Telling people that a drug is good for treating a particular condition when the evidence to back up that claim isn't there is definitely not good.

      Yes, that's why drug efficacy decisions are never based only on observational studies like the one(s) mentioned here. I work for a major pharmaceutical co. and lesson #1 here is: respect the research process. It's rigorous and formal for damned good reason. There be dragons.

      If you want to conclude that a drug has efficacy, the only scientifically accepted

    • Assuming that's true then Medium should absolutely have removed these posts

      While I agree with this part, I can't agree that Medium should remove his entire posting history.

  • Somewhat orthogonal here, but I was left wondering a while back if there is still a non-optical mouse in production. I remember back when the optical mouse first came out some people were complaining that its response was different from that of a mechanical mouse (I did not notice that myself, though they played a lot more starcraft and doom than I did). Does anyone still make a non-optical mouse? Or are they only found at thrift stores now?
    • Absolutely nothing about mechanical computer mice is good, and you'd infuriated by having to lift the mouse so much all the time. As soon as I used an optical mouse, I was very thankful for never having to use the earlier crap again.
    • Sort of yes. A trackpad and a touch screen are not optical.
    • There are still mechanical gaming mice out there. I'm not sure why you would want to use one though, because you can instead get a high-performance optical mouse. Even back in the day as it were Microsoft had a laser mouse that would work on most surfaces and was fairly responsive, and I imagine that has been advanced substantially.

      The problem with a mechanical mouse is that it has slop. I use a trackball, which with 3-point connection to the ball from below doesn't have that problem. The support points are

      • I don't miss the slop, but I kind of miss the mass/momentum characteristics of the rotating ball.

        Not that I would give up my optical mouse for that, but I did like that feel. A long as you constantly cleaned the rollers (no thanks).

  • I thought I'd clarify the title a little bit, because it's misleading. Some type of optical mices were conceived independently by two people: Kirch (cherry) here and some other dude named Lyon (lion). The design that went mainstream was done by two other: Lisa Williams and Robert Cherry ... so you see, while two cherries were involved, they are not the same, and while some credit is due to Kirch for being first (one of!) there's little weight behind it as of why this should be included in an article about
  • In response, Medium removed six years of blogs that I'd written about technology and banned me for life. In my appeal, I said there was no evidence that disputed what I said, and Medium never produced any evidence in response.

    Sorry, that's how it works now. You can only say what we want you to say, thanks very much.

  • Billionaire boys always need new toys.

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

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