Friday, June 11, 2021

11 June 2021: What will success look like in the war on cancer?

 

What will success look like in the war on cancer? When we begin with the end in mind, it
helps us focus on what we want to achieve, understand better how this success can be
attained and create processes to do so. The goal of our strategic plan is to reduce US
cancer deaths from the present 600,000 per year to 100,000 per year by 2030. But how will
this happen?
 
Rest of article: PDF, HTML, Blog.
 
How can you help?
 
1. Follow our Curing Cancer Blog at
2. Sign up for our Curing Cancer Network monthly newsletter by clicking at
3. Become an example to others of anti-cancer behavior. Read our American Code against
decide what steps you can take to reduce your cancer risk and spread the word through
your social networks.
4. Tell any medical researchers you know about our current grants at
5. Contact me at Nat@PathologyOutlines.com with your suggestions or thoughts on
how you can help 

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

1 June 2021: The importance of systemic networks in cancer treatment

 

Cancer is a systemic disease. This means it is important to treat not just the obvious tumor
mass but also the systemic cellular networks that nurture the tumor. Surprisingly, most
cancer treatment plans ignore the systemic networks.
 
Targeting systemic tumor networks will be difficult, requiring combinations of combinations of
therapy. We will need different therapeutic strategies for the primary tumor and many of the
systemic networks. Each type of therapy may need to consist of combinations of treatments
to block a sufficient number of steps in the web-like pathways that exist for each cellular
function.
 
This subject was discussed in the abstract below, which was not accepted at a recent
conference. Although disappointing, the advantage of this rejection is that I can publish it
now without any copyright restrictions. The full paper is at
 
Rest of article - PDF, HTML, Blog
 
How can you help?
 
1. Follow our Curing Cancer Blog at
2. Sign up for our Curing Cancer Network monthly newsletter by clicking at
3. Become an example to others of anti-cancer behavior. Read our American Code against
decide what steps you can take to reduce your cancer risk and spread the word through
your social networks.
4. Tell any medical researchers you know about our current grants at
5. Contact me at Nat@PathologyOutlines.com with your suggestions or thoughts on
how you can help 

Sunday, May 16, 2021

16 May 2021, What should our national cancer goals be?

What are reasonable goals regarding cancer in the United States?

First, let’s discuss what is not reasonable. Conquering cancer does not mean attaining “a world without cancer” (American Cancer Society Mission Statement, accessed 12May21). Cancer will always be part of our world. New cancer cases will continue to arise because (a) cancer is part of the tradeoff inherent in the design of multicellular organisms (Jacqueline 2016); (b) new cancers will continue to develop due to random chronic stress or bad luck (Curing Cancer Blog - Part 7 - Random chronic stress / bad luck as a major cause of cancer, 2021) and (c) we cannot completely end personal behavior which promotes cancer, such as tobacco use or excess weight.

Rest of article:

What should our national cancer goals be? (link), Blog, PDF.

 
How can you help?
 
1. Follow our Curing Cancer Blog at
2. Sign up for our Curing Cancer Network monthly newsletter by clicking at
3. Become an example to others of anti-cancer behavior. Read our American Code against
decide what steps you can take to reduce your cancer risk and spread the word through
your social networks.
4. Tell any medical researchers you know about our current grants at
5. Contact me at Nat@PathologyOutlines.com with your suggestions or thoughts on
how you can help.

Thursday, April 29, 2021

30 April 2021: Letter to President Biden

30 April 2021

Dear President Biden,

Congratulations on your proposal to "end cancer as we know it" and your efforts to increase funding for basic research.

What constitutes a cure for cancer, or ending cancer as we know it? I have developed a strategic plan with the goal of reducing annual US cancer deaths from 600,000 currently to 100,000 by 2030, see http://www.natpernick.com/StrategicPlanCuringCancer.html. To be successful, we need to improve and implement this or a similar strategic plan, which identifies research, clinical and prevention activities that need to be taken and coordinated.

Ending cancer is not analogous to landing on the moon. We are not searching solely for a "silver bullet" or other technological innovation. Instead, we need to change our approach to cancer treatment and focus on (a) attacking tumor networks, not mutations; (b) altering multiple aspects of the tumor microenvironment; (c) identifying, targeting and monitoring systemic tumor networks relating to chronic inflammation, immune system dysfunction and other tumor nurturing effects, and (d) strengthening our cancer prevention programs through promotion of the American Code Against Cancer, see http://www.natpernick.com/AmericanCodeAgainstCancer.html or similar efforts.

We need combinations of combinations of treatment and clinical trials for almost all cancer patients, strategies that led to cures for childhood leukemia, testicular cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma.

I am currently pursuing these efforts, and although I am in contact with pathologists worldwide through my website, PathologyOutlines.com, I am only an individual pathologist. It would be useful to have a partner in the federal government who could identify collaborators in federal agencies or elsewhere to more fully develop and implement this strategic plan.

Please review and advise.

29 April 2021 - Antibodies against Cancer

Question: What's your opinion on the feasibility of adapting the mRNA technology that was used to develop the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines to treat various cancers?

Answer: Here is an article - https://www.mdanderson.org/cancerwise/can-mrna-vaccines-like-those-used-for-covid-19-be-used-in-cancer-care.h00-159457689.html.

The idea is that a cancer vaccine can generate antibodies to attack the tumor. When I was a medical student at the University of Michigan in 1980, we saw a patient with melanoma who was cured, at least at that time, with that approach. But the problem was getting it to work on a consistent basis - his case appeared to be a rare success. Today, we are more technically savvy, and we may have better results.

These points are important:


1. There will be no silver bullet. No one treatment option will likely cure a large percentage of patients with even a specific type of cancer. We will need combinations of treatments to attack different parts of the tumor. This is how we cured childhood leukemia, testicular cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma.


2. For adult tumors, unless the tumor is small, we will also need to monitor and treat the supporting networks that nurture the tumor and will create additional tumors over time [this is my proposal - it is not generally accepted].


3. We should also focus on changing our behavior, which could prevent 30-50% of all cancer related deaths, see http://www.natpernick.com/AmericanCodeAgainstCancer.html

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

27 April 2021: Let's Cure Cancer Together

Let's Cure Cancer Together.

It’s time to implement a strategic plan to cure cancer.

The era of modern cancer treatment began in 1948 when Dr. Sidney Farber, a Boston pathologist, published a landmark study reporting that chemotherapy could induce temporary remissions in childhood leukemia (Farber 1948, free full text-PDF download). Remarkably, this study was met not with hope and acclaim, but with skepticism and outrage (Miller 2006).

Rest of essay:

Let's cure cancer together (link), Blog, PDF.

 

Sunday, April 11, 2021

11 April 2021 - How Cancer Kills - updated

 I have updated "How Cancer Kills" based on comments by Dr. Phillip A. Phillip, Wayne State University:

HTML: http://natpernick.com/CuringCancerPart9.html


BLOG: https://natpernickshealthblog.wordpress.com/2021/03/22/curing-cancer-blog-part-9-how-cancer-kills/


PDF: http://natpernick.com/CuringCancerPart9.pdf

My theory is that cancer deaths are preventable, at least for the short term, for many patients who die quickly of cancer. Their deaths are due to cancer's marked disruption of physiologic systems necessary for life. Sophisticated medical treatment can counter this disruption and the patients can live much longer. This is analogous to diabetic ketoacidosis, which often kills patients with new onset diabetes unless they receive sophisticated treatment to reverse the marked disruption of physiologic systems associated with this disease.