I agree. It's easy to overstate things, but over the next several decades I could easily see a computational personalized approach to fighting cancer: read the unique immunosuppressive markers, sort out what's tractable and what's not, then deliver a mRNA payload for that particular cancer for that particular person.
For the incredibly small amount that I know, it looks like a game changer. (Like everything else, though, there's a long road from theory to practice. Implementation is going be very tough)
I think this is precisely what BioNTech has been doing with melanoma. Not in a few decades, they already had living patients with personalized vaccination against their own melanomas in 2019:
If this immunotherapy gets developed further, the next generations of humanity may look at cancer in the same way that we look upon bacterial diseases: unpleasant, the threat of treatment resistance is there, but not the fearsome serial killer that they used to be.
Although given how we've squandered (and continue to squander) antibiotics, future generations may view bacterial diseases the way past generations did.
i think necesity here is for to block third world from acquisition of new antibiotic drug. there is where new superbug are arise. maybe it kill many there, but it also save many American here in longer term.
in such 3world country, misuse/overuse of antibiotic are make for development of resistant. then poor sanatation are make for it easy for to spread to other persons. https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/5/1/99-0103_article
"Developing Nations" or "Developing World" is better.
"Third world" contributes to exactly the kinds of stereotypes that this comment reinforces — the backwardness of poor countries, where doctors don't know better, science is ignored, etc. It's just not accurate; medical knowledge and competence is on the rise all over the world, among both professionals and volunteers.
no. i am not stopping. i disagree. i see not any inaccuracy. i do not work for AP and do not care what it say in style book, AP change style book many time for to please the pc persons. example, AP change style book for to say singular "they" are now ok: https://www.apstylebook.com/blog_posts/7
i have not in previous heard it "offensive" and am not changing because some person sayes it. i have been to many nation, those i call "third world" are backward. improvement you describe make them moving away from third world, not make term wrong, this is move to second then to first. i will not call different word because somebody say so.
Dude, it's not developing country misuse of antibiotics that's the problem. It's pouring it into animal feed in factory farms. It's doctors in wealthy countries giving their patients an antibiotic prescription for a viral infection because their patients expect them to "do something." You're not getting downvoted for using "third world" you're getting downvoted for speaking from a position of ignorance.
> in the same way that we look upon bacterial diseases: unpleasant, the threat of treatment resistance is there
Those treatment resistances are quite different. Resistant bacteria spread to other people, while cancer is almost always limited to a single patient. So it the treatment works for a certain fraction of cancers, it'll stay at that level, unlike bacteria which become increasingly resistant over time.
(I guess that in the very long term that might not be true, since natural cancer resistance will offer less of an evolutionary advantage. But that assumes that humanity will remain in a similar state as currently, which seems unlikely.)
I know, it is an imperfect analogy. But thank you for noticing and explaining my shortcut to other readers.
Cancers are very patient-specific, and the main threat with immunotherapy is that the targeted cancer adapts quickly enough to escape the immune system again.
>Cancers are very patient-specific, and the main threat with immunotherapy is that the targeted cancer adapts quickly enough to escape the immune system again.
(I'm just an interested party and don't have any formal training on the subject.) I'm sure there are technical terms for it, but from what I've read the lack of regulatory features in the replication process of cancer cells tends to accumulate more mutations and genetic damage through each generation. PARP-inhibitors, for example, help fight cancer by suppressing DNA repair enzymes and letting the cancer cells get into non-viable states more often than healthy tissue.
In general though, this genetic entropy/volatility creates a scenario where adaptations can happen quite quickly.
For the incredibly small amount that I know, it looks like a game changer. (Like everything else, though, there's a long road from theory to practice. Implementation is going be very tough)