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1/18/2007 9:25:13 AM EDT
www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn10971

It sounds almost too good to be true: a cheap and simple drug that kills almost all cancers by switching off their “immortality”. The drug, dichloroacetate (DCA), has already been used for years to treat rare metabolic disorders and so is known to be relatively safe.

It also has no patent, meaning it could be manufactured for a fraction of the cost of newly developed drugs.

Evangelos Michelakis of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, and his colleagues tested DCA on human cells cultured outside the body and found that it killed lung, breast and brain cancer cells, but not healthy cells. Tumours in rats deliberately infected with human cancer also shrank drastically when they were fed DCA-laced water for several weeks.

DCA attacks a unique feature of cancer cells: the fact that they make their energy throughout the main body of the cell, rather than in distinct organelles called mitochondria. This process, called glycolysis, is inefficient and uses up vast amounts of sugar.

Until now it had been assumed that cancer cells used glycolysis because their mitochondria were irreparably damaged. However, Michelakis’s experiments prove this is not the case, because DCA reawakened the mitochondria in cancer cells. The cells then withered and died (Cancer Cell, DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2006.10.020).

Michelakis suggests that the switch to glycolysis as an energy source occurs when cells in the middle of an abnormal but benign lump don’t get enough oxygen for their mitochondria to work properly (see diagram). In order to survive, they switch off their mitochondria and start producing energy through glycolysis.

Crucially, though, mitochondria do another job in cells: they activate apoptosis, the process by which abnormal cells self-destruct. When cells switch mitochondria off, they become “immortal”, outliving other cells in the tumour and so becoming dominant. Once reawakened by DCA, mitochondria reactivate apoptosis and order the abnormal cells to die.

“The results are intriguing because they point to a critical role that mitochondria play:

they impart a unique trait to cancer cells that can be exploited for cancer therapy,” says Dario Altieri, director of the University of Massachusetts Cancer Center in Worcester.

The phenomenon might also explain how secondary cancers form. Glycolysis generates lactic acid, which can break down the collagen matrix holding cells together. This means abnormal cells can be released and float to other parts of the body, where they seed new tumours.

DCA can cause pain, numbness and gait disturbances in some patients, but this may be a price worth paying if it turns out to

be effective against all cancers. The next step is to run clinical trials of DCA in people with cancer. These may have to be funded by charities, universities and governments: pharmaceutical companies are unlikely to pay because they can’t make money on unpatented medicines. The pay-off is that if DCA does work, it will be easy to manufacture and dirt cheap.

Paul Clarke, a cancer cell biologist at the University of Dundee in the UK, says the findings challenge the current assumption that mutations, not metabolism, spark off cancers. “The question is: which comes first?” he says.



You guys know what this means???  We might be able to smoke in bars forever!
1/18/2007 9:31:45 AM EDT
[#1]
That is truly good news!!
1/18/2007 9:33:50 AM EDT
[#2]
IF....IF....true that is blessing for oh so many!
1/18/2007 9:34:34 AM EDT
[#3]
If its true, fantastic.  It is certainly referencing reputable scientists.  You know of course the cancer treatment industry will do everything in their power to prove it does not work.
1/18/2007 9:36:17 AM EDT
[#4]
They will end up dead by the end of the month
1/18/2007 9:37:28 AM EDT
[#5]
Cure already found before that one?  Look up vitamin B17...
1/18/2007 9:37:42 AM EDT
[#6]


if it is simple, cheap, and it works, i have little hope it will ever be available here in the US.

i firmly beileve we stifle certain drugs and research avenues so as not to find a "cure" or a vaccination. return "customers" spend more money...

ETA: i say this as a cancer survivor.
1/18/2007 9:42:59 AM EDT
[#7]
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.
1/18/2007 9:43:06 AM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:

if it is simple, cheap, and it works, i have little hope it will ever be available here in the US.

i firmly beileve we stifle certain drugs and research avenues so as not to find a "cure" or a vaccination. return "customers" spend more money...

ETA: i say this as a cancer survivor.


Well if all the cancer patients up in Canada start getting better then I think they'll have a bit of an uprising down here to get the drugs one way or another.

If I was terminally ill with cancer there's not much I'd stop at to get my hands on the cure!
1/18/2007 1:51:25 PM EDT
[#9]

Quoted:
Cure already found before that one?  Look up vitamin B17...



Laetrile (misspelled I think)?  That appricot nonsense that does nothing but give false hope to those who are desparate, and of course makes money for the thieving lying bastards that deserve nothing but a painful death and a special place in hell? Or whatever the fuck that bullshit con artist shit is?
Do you have a personal experience with it as a patient, friend, or family member?  Or are you selling it?  This shit has been proven to not work worht a damn.  Sure some people using it have lived, but then some people are going to live no matter what they do.  Some percentage of patients will survive.

And if I seem a bit sensitive about this, it's because I'm a cancer survivor (so far ;) ) and have a hatred for those who rip off the dying.
1/18/2007 1:54:55 PM EDT
[#10]
Huh!
1/18/2007 2:00:39 PM EDT
[#11]
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?
1/18/2007 2:09:41 PM EDT
[#12]

Quoted:
If its true, fantastic.  It is certainly referencing reputable scientists.  You know of course the cancer treatment industry will do everything in their power to prove it does not work.




+1

1/18/2007 2:19:08 PM EDT
[#13]

Quoted:
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?


I hope you are wrong but probably not

I would say this though, the millions of Americans who have had someone die of cancer that is close to them would probably (hopefully) string up any fuckheads that would conspire to keep a cure for cancer off the market.
1/18/2007 2:22:43 PM EDT
[#14]
The Canadians beat us to it?  Shit.....
Now we may actually have to
thank Canada for something....

Good news, great info!

1/18/2007 2:23:23 PM EDT
[#15]
tag
1/18/2007 2:24:32 PM EDT
[#16]
I pray to God, that this is finally something that will be a break-through in cures for cancer.

But I've heard this so many times, I only hope it finally works.

1/18/2007 2:26:37 PM EDT
[#17]
neato!
1/18/2007 2:32:16 PM EDT
[#18]

Quoted:
The Canadians beat us to it?  Shit.....
Now we may actually have to
thank Canada for something....

Good news, great info!



Like the M1 Garand?
1/18/2007 2:34:28 PM EDT
[#19]

Quoted:

Quoted:
The Canadians beat us to it?  Shit.....
Now we may actually have to
thank Canada for something....

Good news, great info!



Like the M1 Garand?


That's like thanking Germany for the HK416

Or Belgium for the FN SCAR

It's still made in America, by an American
1/18/2007 2:34:58 PM EDT
[#20]

Quoted:
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?


1/18/2007 2:35:06 PM EDT
[#21]

Quoted:
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.


You say that as if cancer is some new evil disease that threatens to kill off humanity.  The only reason so many people die of cancer is that nothing else kills them first.  Cancer is the direct byproduct of modern civilization.
1/18/2007 2:36:56 PM EDT
[#22]
Naaa

couldn't be



They didn't develop it using embrionic stem cells..



1/18/2007 2:37:20 PM EDT
[#23]

Quoted:

Quoted:
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.


You say that as if cancer is some new evil disease that threatens to kill off humanity.  The only reason so many people die of cancer is that nothing else kills them first.  Cancer is the direct byproduct of modern civilization.


So your position is cancer is nothing to be concerned about? I'm trying to hold my tongue long enough to hear your attempt to explain your statement there but damn it is hard.
1/18/2007 2:38:32 PM EDT
[#24]

Quoted:

Quoted:
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?



yeah owned by big oil and George Bush
1/18/2007 2:41:16 PM EDT
[#25]

Quoted:

if it is simple, cheap, and it works, i have little hope it will ever be available here in the US.

i firmly beileve we stifle certain drugs and research avenues so as not to find a "cure" or a vaccination. return "customers" spend more money...

ETA: i say this as a cancer survivor.


I believe that too. They want to treat you, not cure you.
1/18/2007 2:43:02 PM EDT
[#26]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.


You say that as if cancer is some new evil disease that threatens to kill off humanity.  The only reason so many people die of cancer is that nothing else kills them first.  Cancer is the direct byproduct of modern civilization.


So your position is cancer is nothing to be concerned about? I'm trying to hold my tongue long enough to hear your attempt to explain your statement there but damn it is hard.


Not at all.  I'm all for curing any disease we can get, I'm just saying that cancer is simply what kills people when nothing else does.  Cancer, by its very nature cannot be a world endangering epidemic.

Besides, if we cure cancer, something else will come along to kill us.  Probably just plain organ failure.  Then we will figure out how to replace organs thru bionics or grown organs.  Then something else will kill us.  

Nothing lasts forever, but damnit, if I wanna live to 150, I wanna live to 150!  Keep the breakthroughs coming!
1/18/2007 2:44:53 PM EDT
[#27]

Quoted:
If its true, fantastic.  It is certainly referencing reputable scientists.  You know of course the cancer treatment industry will do everything in their power to prove it does not work.  




Sadly, this was my first thought.  But if it's true, this will truely be a wonderful thing for so many people........




-K
1/18/2007 2:47:11 PM EDT
[#28]
All this conspiracy talk about "keeping cures secret" so the drug companies and hospitals make more money is total crap.  It's in their best interests to cure cancer.  

It seems that as time goes on, terminal patients have to spend longer and longer in the hospital for treatment, or just waiting to die.  

My prediction is that after cancer isn't a problem anymore, the next thing that kills people will require even longer hospital stays and more research to "cure".  This will allow the hospitals and drug companies to make even more money.

1/18/2007 2:47:26 PM EDT
[#29]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?



yeah owned by big oil and George Bush


Did you ever wonder why cancer was always talked about in whispers prior to the 1950's?  That's because it took until then for Halliburton to invent the first cures for cancer.  They had invented the Cancer Machine decades before to kill blacks and jews but they screwed up the settings giving most any race/ethnic group cancer.  They now kill blacks with Menthol cigarettes and by blowing up levees.
1/18/2007 2:48:34 PM EDT
[#30]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?



yeah owned by big oil and George Bush


Did you ever wonder why cancer was always talked about in whispers prior to the 1950's?  That's because it took until then for Halliburton to invent the first cures for cancer.  They had invented the Cancer Machine decades before to kill blacks and jews but they screwed up the settings giving most any race/ethnic group cancer.  They now kill blacks with Menthol cigarettes and by blowing up levees.


1/18/2007 2:52:54 PM EDT
[#31]

Quoted:

Not at all.  I'm all for curing any disease we can get, I'm just saying that cancer is simply what kills people when nothing else does.


OK, you can say the same for anything that kills.



Cancer, by its very nature cannot be a world endangering epidemic...


Who said it is? Cancer is however a leading cause of mortality and a painful prolonged way to go at that.



Besides, if we cure cancer, something else will come along to kill us.


Of course, but it won't be cancer and that's a worthwhile improvement. One step at a time. I've buried three people I cared about in the last few years thanks to cancer, it's not the way anyone should check out.
1/18/2007 2:55:04 PM EDT
[#32]
So, what are the side effects of DCA in the body?

If it's cheap, and no side effects, could this be something that can be put in vitamin pills, or used to fortify staple foods?

Prevention at the stage of miniscule tumors would be much much better than trying to kill off something that's already grown and become dangerous.  
1/18/2007 3:01:02 PM EDT
[#33]

Quoted:
So, what are the side effects of DCA in the body?

If it's cheap, and no side effects, could this be something that can be put in vitamin pills, or used to fortify staple foods?

Prevention at the stage of miniscule tumors would be much much better than trying to kill off something that's already grown and become dangerous.  


Better yet, can they put it in cigarettes?
1/18/2007 3:15:04 PM EDT
[#34]
It would be great "if" it does really work. Too bad my mom missed it as cancer killed her 5 years ago.

As an aside it is amazing that so many here are cynical towards the doctors. Disease is something we humans have to deal with. If they cure one there is sure to be another waiting in the wings to take over.
1/18/2007 3:15:31 PM EDT
[#35]
One can hope, but I must admit some skepticism. I await further laboratory research and possibly clinical trials. Not a cancer survivor myself, though we've had a couple of cancer deaths in the family and are likely to have a couple more if my parents keep smoking.


Quoted:
Cure already found before that one?  Look up vitamin B17...


Survey says... Bullshit quackery!

Also known as amygdalin and laevomandelonitrile (or laetrile for short and Laetrile as a brand name for a partly synthetic version), it is not a vitamin. It's a glycoside derived from the bitter almond and apricot pits that shows no benefits to cancer patients, and can be harmful due to its hydrogen cyanide content.


Amygdalin has been advocated by some as a "cure" or a "preventative" for cancer: as there is no scientifically accepted evidence of its efficacy, it has not been approved for this use by the Food and Drug Administration.

The US government's National Institutes of Health reports that two clinical trials with laetrile have been published. One Phase I study found that amygdalin caused minimal side effects; the side effects that were seen were similar to the symptoms of cyanide poisoning. One Phase II study with 175 patients had some patients reporting improvements in symptoms, but all patients showed cancer progression 7 months after completing treatment, and it was determined no further tests were necessary.

While no double-blind clinical trials may have been conducted, a clinical trial was carried out in 1982 by the Mayo Clinic and three other U.S. cancer centers under NCI sponsorship. Laetrile and "metabolic therapy" were administered as recommended by their promoters to 178 patients with advanced cancer for which there was no proven treatment. None were cured or stabilized or had any improvement of cancer-related symptoms. The median survival rate was about five months. In survivors after seven months, tumor size had increased. Several patients suffered from cyanide poisoning.


Also, seems like a whole lot of people here are conspiracy theorists about the medical industry What, the Kennedy assassination and denying we landed on the moon wasn't fun enough anymore?
1/18/2007 3:23:59 PM EDT
[#36]
cool, im saving this. So that in the future, after this has been buried by big medical I will be able to do do-it yourself home cancer treatments.

(wow, my sentence structure sucked on that one)
1/18/2007 3:24:14 PM EDT
[#37]

Quoted:

Quoted:
So, what are the side effects of DCA in the body?

If it's cheap, and no side effects, could this be something that can be put in vitamin pills, or used to fortify staple foods?

Prevention at the stage of miniscule tumors would be much much better than trying to kill off something that's already grown and become dangerous.  


Better yet, can they put it in cigarettes?


Now that would be funny as hell.  What would those "Truth" assholes say then?
1/18/2007 3:31:40 PM EDT
[#38]
Tag
1/18/2007 3:38:37 PM EDT
[#39]

Quoted:

Quoted:
So, what are the side effects of DCA in the body?

If it's cheap, and no side effects, could this be something that can be put in vitamin pills, or used to fortify staple foods?

Prevention at the stage of miniscule tumors would be much much better than trying to kill off something that's already grown and become dangerous.  


Better yet, can they put it in cigarettes?

oh shit, I think I just hurt myself
1/18/2007 3:41:18 PM EDT
[#40]

Quoted:
Very good news, but not likely to go anywhere. Cancer is a multi-billion dollar per year industry. Think the medical community wants to lose that golden egg?


Definitely.

Do you think doctors actually like treating cancer patients? Besides, it’s not like doctors are going to be standing in the unemployment line if cancer is cured. People that don’t need treatment for cancer are going to need treatment for something else eventually anyway. Doctors still get paid.

Same thing with drug companies. They aren’t likely to fund research on this particular drug since they can’t patent it. But they aren’t likely to fight it’s acceptance. Drug companies will start trying to find a better version of the drug that is patentable too. If they know what mechanism is killing the cancer cells they can probably find other drugs that will do the same thing, maybe with fewer side effects.

(I hope this stuff actually works. I think cancer should be the #1 priority for our medical research.)
1/18/2007 3:57:03 PM EDT
[#41]
Sorry if I'm underwhelmed.

Apparently this cancer "cure" could help in treatments of cancer according to the article.  And, it has never had clinical trials, i.e. they are completely guessing about its effects on cancer in the human body.

Also, all referenced studies come out of the UK and Canada, not the U.S.


Oh, and all of the medical conspiracy threorists forgot one fact, who pays for all of this?  The Government, and Insurance companies pay the billions and billions to the doctors and drug companies.  They would not let them get away with covering up an effective cancer drug.  Sure, some doctors and hospitals commit fraud, or practice using the slower drug to cause more treatments(and thus income), for a while, but eventually they get caught.
1/18/2007 6:41:48 PM EDT
[#42]
The longer they keep cancer patients alive the more boner drugs and magic hair growth pills they can sell.  And, of course, Big Pharma conspiracy theories suffer from the same failing as the rest: how many thousands of evil money grubbing conspirators, willing to see their own Grandma suffer an excrutiating death for profits, are keeping this secrect out of the New York Times?

1/18/2007 6:56:51 PM EDT
[#43]
I hope this is for real.  I have a 4 year old daughter that is about a year and a half from her 5 year mark.  We are always on the edge, and this would be great just in case.
1/18/2007 7:18:11 PM EDT
[#44]

Quoted:

if it is simple, cheap, and it works, i have little hope it will ever be available here in the US.

i firmly beileve we stifle certain drugs and research avenues so as not to find a "cure" or a vaccination. return "customers" spend more money...

ETA: i say this as a cancer survivor.


+1
1/18/2007 7:23:25 PM EDT
[#45]

Quoted:

Quoted:
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.


You say that as if cancer is some new evil disease that threatens to kill off humanity.  The only reason so many people die of cancer is that nothing else kills them first.  Cancer is the direct byproduct of modern civilization.


That has to be the most retarded thing i've read in a long time.

1/18/2007 7:29:46 PM EDT
[#46]
www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=9091f800-ac23-4511-b962-7ed60584b88a


Cancer finding hailed
Causes disease to regress: Molecule could treat lung, breast, brain cancers

Melissa Leong
National Post

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

CREDIT: American Cancer Society, Getty Images
Cancer cells, such as these breast cancer cells, have been killed in test tubes and rats by a molecule called dichloroacetate (DCA).

A simple molecule, used for decades to treat children with rare metabolic diseases, commits "immortal" cancer cells to a natural death and could soon be used to treat many forms of cancer, according to a new study.

University of Alberta researchers were excited to discover that dichloroacetate (DCA) causes regression in several cancers, including lung, breast and brain tumours.

"It's important for the future of cancer," said Dr. Evangelos Michelakis, a professor at the University of Alberta's department of medicine and an author of the study.

The findings were published yesterday in the journal Cancer Cell.

DCA, a non-toxic compound comprised of "a couple of oxygens, a couple of chlorides and a couple of carbons," appears to repair the damage that cancer cells cause to mitochondria -- the energy- producing units in cells.

Mitochondria regulate cell death and because cancer cells suppress their mitochondria, they achieve "immortality," Dr. Michelakis said. This appears to offer cancer cells a significant advantage in growth compared to normal cells as well as protection from many standard chemotherapies, he said.

DCA "puts life into the mitochondria," making cancer cells more susceptible to apoptosis -- a natural cell suicide mechanism that enables a person to control cell numbers and kill off cells that threaten his or her survival, he said.

DCA, being so small, is easily absorbed into the body, and after oral intake, it can reach areas in the body that other drugs cannot -- making it possible to treat brain cancers.

It could one day be used in conjunction with traditional chemotherapies, Dr. Michelakis said.

"The DCA will enable the cell death mechanisms and then chemotherapy would have a much easier job; you could use lower doses and [the chemotherapy would be] less toxic," he said.

DCA affects cancer cells without affecting normal ones, he added.

Because the inexpensive drug has been used on both healthy and ill patients for 30 years, it can be immediately tested on people suffering from cancer, Dr. Michelakis said.

But because DCA is not patented and is not owned by a pharmaceutical company, it will be a challenge to find funding to begin clinical trials, he said.

Until the past few years, researchers believed damage to mitochondria in cancer cells was permanent. But Dr. Michelakis, a cardiologist, wanted to test this belief. "When you see what DCA can do in other mitochondria, we said, 'Why don't we try it in cancer?' "

Researchers used human tumours and studied them in test tubes and in rats.

"This preliminary research ... offers hope to thousands of Canadians and all others around the world who are afflicted by cancer," Dr. Philip Branton of the CIHR Institute of Cancer said in a statement.
© National Post 2007

1/18/2007 7:30:27 PM EDT
[#47]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.


You say that as if cancer is some new evil disease that threatens to kill off humanity.  The only reason so many people die of cancer is that nothing else kills them first.  Cancer is the direct byproduct of modern civilization.


That has to be the most retarded thing i've read in a long time.



I don't think it is retarted at all.  All he is saying is that the longer lifespans that we now enjoy, due to modern medicine, are exposing us to a higher probability of developing cancer.  I tend to agree.  

 
1/18/2007 7:35:12 PM EDT
[#48]
Here's the article from U. of Alberta's news site:

www.expressnews.ualberta.ca/article.cfm?id=8153


Small molecule offers big hope against cancer

By Ryan Smith, ExpressNews Staff
U of A researcher Dr. Evangelos Michelakis has shown that this tiny DCA molecule could make a difference in the battle against cancer.

U of A researcher Dr. Evangelos Michelakis has shown that this tiny DCA molecule could make a difference in the battle against cancer.

Print story | Email story

January 16, 2007 - Edmonton - DCA is an odourless, colourless, inexpensive, relatively non-toxic, small molecule. And researchers at the University of Alberta believe it may soon be used as an effective treatment for many forms of cancer.

Dr. Evangelos Michelakis, a professor at the U of A Department of Medicine, has shown that dichloroacetate (DCA) causes regression in several cancers, including lung, breast and brain tumors.

Michelakis and his colleagues, including post-doctoral fellow Dr. Sebastian Bonnet, have published the results of their research in the journal Cancer Cell.

Scientists and doctors have used DCA for decades to treat children with inborn errors of metabolism due to mitochondrial diseases. Mitochondria, the energy producing units in cells, have been connected with cancer since the 1930s, when researchers first noticed that these organelles dysfunction when cancer is present.

Until recently, researchers believed that cancer-affected mitochondria are permanently damaged and that this damage is the result, not the cause, of the cancer. But Michelakis, a cardiologist, questioned this belief and began testing DCA, which activates a critical mitochondrial enzyme, as a way to "revive" cancer-affected mitochondria.

The results astounded him.

Michelakis, the Canada Research Chair in Pulmonary Hypertension and director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program with the Capital Health Authority, and his colleagues found that DCA normalized the mitochondrial function in many cancers, showing that their function was actively suppressed by the cancer but was not permanently damaged by it.

More importantly, they found that the normalization of mitochondrial function resulted in a significant decrease in tumor growth both in test tubes and in animal models. Also, they noted that DCA, unlike most currently used chemotherapies, did not have any effects on normal, non-cancerous tissues.

"I think DCA can be selective for cancer because it attacks a fundamental process in cancer development that is unique to cancer cells," Michelakis said. "Cancer cells actively suppress their mitochondria, which alters their metabolism, and this appears to offer cancer cells a significant advantage in growth compared to normal cells, as well as protection from many standard chemotherapies. Because mitochondria regulate cell death - or apoptosis - cancer cells can thus achieve resistance to apoptosis, and this appears to be reversed by DCA."

"One of the really exciting things about this compound is that it might be able to treat many different forms of cancer, because all forms of cancer suppress mitochondrial function; in fact, this is why most cancers can be detected by tests like PET (positron emission tomography), which detects the unique metabolic profile of cancer compared to normal cells," added Michelakis.

Another encouraging thing about DCA is that, being so small, it is easily absorbed in the body, and, after oral intake, it can reach areas in the body that other drugs cannot, making it possible to treat brain cancers, for example.

Also, because DCA has been used in both healthy people and sick patients with mitochondrial diseases, researchers already know that it is a relatively non-toxic molecule that can be immediately tested in patients with cancer.

Furthermore, the DCA compound is not patented or owned by any pharmaceutical company, and, therefore, would likely be an inexpensive drug to administer, Michelakis added.

However, as DCA is not patented, Michelakis is concerned that it may be difficult to find funding from private investors to test DCA in clinical trials. He is grateful for the support he has already received from publicly funded agencies, such as the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR), and he is hopeful such support will continue and allow him to conduct clinical trials of DCA on cancer patients.


Michelakis' research is currently funded by the CIHR, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the Canada Research Chairs program and the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research.

"This preliminary research is encouraging and offers hope to thousands of Canadians and all others around the world who are afflicted by cancer, as it accelerates our understanding of and action around targeted cancer treatments," said Dr. Philip Branton, Scientic Director of the CIHR Institute of Cancer.

1/18/2007 7:45:10 PM EDT
[#49]

Quoted:

Quoted:

if it is simple, cheap, and it works, i have little hope it will ever be available here in the US.

i firmly beileve we stifle certain drugs and research avenues so as not to find a "cure" or a vaccination. return "customers" spend more money...

ETA: i say this as a cancer survivor.


I believe that too. They want to treat you, not cure you.


Absolutely ridiculous. You think that all of the drug companies, which are in hard-fought competition with each other, also cooperate to block the development/release of a cancer cure? Nonsense. Any company that had a cancer cure would release it as soon as they possibly could, because their company would win.

Some people in this thread are treating Big Pharma like DU'ers treat Big Oil...
1/18/2007 7:52:42 PM EDT
[#50]

Quoted:

Quoted:

Quoted:
I will be very, very curious to see if they publish results in reputable medical journals.  I hope, for the world's sake, that this new drug works.


You say that as if cancer is some new evil disease that threatens to kill off humanity.  The only reason so many people die of cancer is that nothing else kills them first.  Cancer is the direct byproduct of modern civilization.


That has to be the most retarded thing i've read in a long time.



actually its not retarded,

cancer wasnt that huge of a deal back before the 1900's, when most of the population died before it had a chance to take hold, and kill them before something else did.

Longer life spans has allowed cancer to take hold in our society.

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