Guest guest Posted May 5, 2009 Report Share Posted May 5, 2009 re: Cancer is a fungus, says Dr Simoncini Your Question: Would it suit the large pharmaceutical companies to look towards anything even resembling 'cure' when their very reason for existence is the continued sale of their 'remedial' drug products? Reply: The pharmaceutical companies have no regulatory authority to approve interventions for cancers. The role of independent drug assessment is entrusted to FDA (by Congress) in the US, and requires convincing evidence from well-controlled studies with independent data monitoring. The approval of Gleevec, just one example, was based on its ability to induce remissions in previously fatal CML. If the system was rigged to favor pharmaceutical companies, why would so many companies try to develop new therapies for cancers? See for example, the very crowded lymphoma pipeline: http://www.lymphomation.org/treatment-pipeline.htm Cancer is well understood today. It's not one disease but perhaps hundreds. The common denominator being a cell of a certain type develops defects (typically genetic defects - deletions, translocations) that lead to uncontrolled growth and survival advantages. In advanced stage, the abnormal cells can form tumors that overwhelm the body system. See http://www.lymphomation.org/about-lay.htm -- That all cancers, or any cancer, could be a fungal growth, or can be reversed by treating a fungus is implausible at best. - noting that the diagnostic process involves identification of the cell of origin in each case and type of cancer (pancreatic, breast, prostate, basal cell ... and so on). And the lymphomas, for example, have approximately 40 subtypes, depending on the developmental stage (differentiation) of the blood cell of origin ...the name for lymphoma is dervided from the cell type - a lymphocyte. As noted, the supposition that a cure for cancer is being thwarted by the industry wrongly assumes the industry controls the assessment process. True, the sponsor profits if it can bring a more effectivetreatment to market, but it most prove (in large randomized studies) that the therapy provides benefit for a medical condition, relative to existing therapies and the disease untreated. Noting also that placebo controls are not accepted as ethical in cancer studies. Please note that most such endeavors fail ... most new compounds do not provide clinical benefit. And these are very expensive failures - costing approximately 1 billion dollars. Licence exclusivity and patent protection are provided by our society (when they succeeed) to give incentives for companies to keep trying. Profit potential drives the science, but does not determine which are approved. Finally, a conspiracy by pharmaceutical companies would require the complicity of its employees and scientists, the experts, all physicians, and regulators in the field --- who also get cancers ... whose children and loved ones also get cancers. Indeed, 3 in 5 Americans will develop a serious cancer in their life time. If such a conspiracy existed, would not many experts relent and go public when their children developed a cancer? I hope you will consider amending your perspective, or to at least communicate to your readers that (being a layperson) you have a need to gather more facts before giving opinion in this area. Such misinformation or support for implausible ideas can harm patients, who will be prone to hoping that a simple fix exists - who may delay or avoid proven or truly promising investigational therapies based on such myths. Sincerely, Karl Schwartz President and co-founder, Patients Against Lymphoma Patient Consultant to the FDA/Oncologic Drug Advisory Committee (ODAC) Participant: NCI Progress Review Group for Blood Cancers (LMPRG) Participant: Biospecimen Access and Ethical, Legal, and Policy Issues Workshop (ELP) Participant: Custodianship and Ownership Issues in Biospecimen Research Symposium Patients Against Lymphoma www.lymphomation.org Evidence-based information on lymphomas and treatments, independent of health industry funding 3774 Buckwampum Road Riegelsville, PA 18077 Phone: 610-346-8419 Fax: 801-409-5736 Email: KarlS@... About Us: http://www.lymphomation.org/aboutus.pdf How to Help: www.lymphomation.org/how-to-help.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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