THE MOSS REPORTS
This week I conclude my review of an important statement by Andrew
von Eschenbach, MD, the director of the National Cancer Institute,
in which he outlined his "challenge vision" for the future
of cancer research, and made the astonishing assertion that cancer
will be essentially conquered by 2015.
For thirty years I have been studying the field of cancer therapy
and chronicling the war on cancer. The fruit of my long career in
this field is The Moss Reports,
a comprehensive library of guides to both the conventional and alternative
treatment of over 230 different kinds of cancer. For cancer patients
there can be few more useful guides and decision-making tools than
a Moss Report.
To order a Moss Report please visit
our website, www.cancerdecisions.com,
or call Diane at 1-800-980-1234
(814-238-3367 from outside the US).
We look forward to helping you.
IN GOD WE TRUST, ALL OTHERS SHOW DATA: A REPLY TO THE NCI DIRECTOR'S
"CHALLENGE VISON" - PART TWO
Predictions of Cure
Dr. von Eschenbach boldly asserts that cancer will be vanquished
by 2015 – but where does he think the new breakthrough treatments
are going to come from? He rests his hopes on the new "targeted"
drugs, as well as "extraordinary enabling technologies"
of various types, including bioinformatics and nanotechnology.
What exactly do these terms mean? The field of bioinformatics is
perhaps too new to have acquired a single, clear definition, although
the Jackson Laboratory website describes it as "the application
of computer technology to the management of biological information.
Specifically, it is the science of developing computer databases
and algorithms to facilitate and expedite biological research, particularly
in genomics." (Jackson Laboratory is one of the world's largest
mammalian genetic research facilities.)
And how does nanotechnology fit into the picture? This is a particularly
vague term, whose many definitions range from "technology that
changes atoms to create something new" to "an experimental
technology which uses individual atoms or molecules as the components
of minute machines, measured by the nanometer, or a millionth of
a millimeter."
I do not for one minute dismiss the potential of new treatments
that are based on nanotechnology. But it must be understood that
nanotechnology is a branch of science that is still very much in
its infancy. The term is not even found in NCI's own Cancer Dictionary
(www.nci.nih.gov).
Dr. von Eschenbach states that in the future "changes in gene
expression and cell physiology will herald clinically overt disease;
and molecular profiles of tumor will determine recipes for targeted
therapies." Again, we have heard such predictions before. But,
except in rare cases, cancer has proven to be far too complex a
disease to yield to cookbook-style recipes.
It is one thing to speculate on the distant potential of innovative
approaches still in their earliest stages of development. It is
another thing entirely for the director of the National Cancer Institute
to claim that these techniques will conquer cancer in just 11 years!
I tried to follow his thinking on this, but (in addition to the
inaccuracies noted above) his projections read like a buzzword-peppered
business school presentation. For example:
"The NCI has adopted strategic initiatives in bioinformatics,
development of innovative cancer interventions, clinical trial implementation,
elimination of cancer health disparities, early detection, prevention
and prediction of cancer risk, molecular epidemiological and integrative
cancer biology. In each of these areas, we plan to increase and
focus resources to integrate infrastructure and foster collaboration
through networks and consortia."
This sort of jargon may impress committee members on Capitol Hill,
but it will leave the average person completely confused. How is
NCI going to rapidly accomplish any one of these tasks? Take early
detection, for example. Safe and reliable tests for common cancers
such as prostate or lung cancer have eluded the scientific community
for decades. Even the use of the PSA test to screen for prostate
cancer, long a mainstay of preventive strategies, seems to be heading
for oblivion. Technology assessment agencies in Canada, England,
Sweden, and Australia have all recommended against the routine screening
of the male population for prostate cancer. In fact, in October,
2004, even Thomas A. Stamey, MD, the Stanford University professor
who invented the PSA test, admitted that "the prostate specific
antigen era in the United States is over for prostate cancer"
(Stamey 2004).
What exactly does Dr. von Eschenbach mean when he promises to "integrate
infrastructure," to "foster collaboration through consortia,"
and so forth? Whether these business concepts can be applied successfully
to the taming of cancer is extremely doubtful. But one thing is
certain: such an approach is bound to involve the formation of yet
more committees and layers of bureaucracy, all of which will not
only slow things down immensely but will also come at a steep price
in terms of public money.
Cost of Treatment
And what are we to make of Dr. von Eschenbach's promises to eliminate
"cancer health disparities"? Are we to believe that the
NCI will somehow find a way, at last, to bring these hypothetical
new cancer treatments to all Americans, if not the entire world?
Here is where the rubber hits the road. Dr. von Eschenbach, with
no documentation, claims that his new strategy will result in cost
savings. Yet many experts say that even at this early stage of development,
far from widening access to the best treatments, targeted drugs
are already bankrupting many individuals, and have the potential
to add immeasurably to the nation's financial woes.
In the last several years we have seen the introduction of the
first generation of targeted therapies. What has been most startling
about them is not their medical utility but their price: Avastin,
for example, costs $4,400, Erbitux $17,000, and Zevalin $24,000—and
that's per patient, per month!
For an analysis of these new drugs' costs click or go to: http://slate.msn.com/id/2102844/
It bears emphasizing that at present there are no targeted drugs
that look likely to rid us of even a fraction of the suffering and
death caused by advanced cancer. But let us assume for the moment
that Dr. von Eschenbach's "challenge vision" is basically
on target, and that effective new drugs are indeed in the offing.
What would be the cost of an effective combination of new patented
drugs that could rid the US alone of all suffering and death from
cancer?
The US government has so far shown little inclination to negotiate
with Big Pharma to lower the price of drugs. In fact, it has explicitly
prevented state agencies from doing so. As things currently stand,
therefore, the drug companies charge whatever the market will bear
for FDA-approved treatments. If it costs a patient $17,000 per month
for Erbitux, a minimally effective treatment, how much will these
hypothetical new and supposedly really effective treatments cost?
No one knows, of course. But given past history, it will be multiples
of current costs. People may have to liquidate their life savings,
mortgage their homes, hold fund-raising suppers, and generally impoverish
themselves, their families and friends just to afford one year of
such treatment. And what will happen to them then? After all, Dr.
von Eschenbach is talking about controlling, not curing, cancer,
and so the costs will continue indefinitely.
Like many scientists, Dr. von Eschenbach ignores the economic dimensions
of his treatment proposals. Does he really believe that insurance
companies will simply write a check for the cost of such new treatments?
But even if we assumed for the sake of argument that NCI could get
the drug companies to limit the total cost of these blockbuster
treatments to, say, $8,500 per month, that would still work out
to $100,000 per person per year. And if only one year's tally of
1.3 million cancer patients were treated that would come to $130
billion per year in the US alone. Each new year would bring another
phalanx of cancer patients needing these new treatments in order
to stay alive. In this case, we will soon be pushing a trillion
dollars just for the new cancer drugs alone. As the late Sen. Everett
Dirksen once said, "A billion here, a billion there. Pretty
soon it adds up to real money."
Integrative Biology or Integrative Oncology?
Dr. von Eschenbach talks at length about NCI's "integrative
cancer biology program." But he says nothing at all about "integrative
oncology," which combines the best of complementary and alternative
medicine (CAM) and conventional treatments for the benefit of all
patients.
This is more than an accidental oversight. CAM offers the potential
of not just more effective, but profoundly more economical, treatments.
That is because most of the tools in the CAM armamentarium are non-patented,
natural substances. But ignoring CAM is a stubborn blind spot that
greatly narrows the scope of the Director's whole report. Like his
predecessors, Dr. von Eschenbach has ‘bet the store' on blue-sky
technology that has a very uncertain future, while ignoring the
many useful CAM treatments that are better established and much
more economically feasible.
And what about the greatest hope of all, which is the primary prevention
of this awful disease? The prevention of cancer has formed the lifework
of many fine scientists, such as University of Illinois Professor
Emeritus Samuel S. Epstein, MD. Dr. von Eschenbach gives a few glancing
references to prevention, but has nothing to say about the essential
task of decreasing exposure to carcinogens in the air, food, water
and workplace, which are ultimately responsible for initiating a
significant proportion of all cancers.
Dr. von Eschenbach's stirring manifesto may temporarily silence
those on Capitol Hill who are restive over the unsuccessful war
on cancer. But this Utopian "challenge vision" is unlikely
to lead to the control, much less the cure, of many cancers, especially
within an 11-year time frame. Instead, it will once again divert
attention away from more promising approaches of primary prevention
and low-cost alternatives, which continue to languish in the netherworld
of cancer medicine.
--Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D.
References:
Feder, Barnaby J. Doctors use
nanotechnology to improve health care. New York Times,
Nov. 1, 2004. Retrieved Nov. 1, 2004 from: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/01/technology/01nano.html
Feinstein, AR, et al. The Will
Rogers phenomenon: stage migration and new diagnostic techniques
as a source of misleading statistics for survival in cancer. New
Engl J Med. 1985;312:1604-08.
Hutchison, GB and Shapiro S.
Lead time gained by diagnostic screening for breast cancer. JNCI
1968;41:666-673.
Moss, RW. Questioning Chemotherapy.
1995, Equinox Press, Lemont, PA.
National Cancer Institute. Number
of Cancer Survivors Growing According to New Report. June 24, 2004.
Retrieved October 31, 2004 from: http://www.cancer.gov/newscenter/pressreleases/MMWRCancerSurvivorship
Shwartz M. Estimates of lead
time and length bias in a breast cancer screening program. Cancer.
1980 Aug 15;46(4):844-51.
Stamey TA, Caldwell M, McNeal JE, Nolley
R, Hemenez M, Downs J. The prostate specific antigen era
in the United States is over for prostate cancer: what happened
in the last 20 years? J Urol. 2004 Oct;172(4 Pt 1):1297-301.
Tannock IF. Eradication of a
disease: How we cured symptomless prostate cancer. Lancet.
2002;359:1341-42.
von Eschenbach, Andrew C. A
Vision for the National Cancer Program in the United States. Nature
Reviews Cancer, 2004;4:820-28. Retrieved November 1, 2004 from:
http://www.medscape.com/viewpublication/1045_toc?vol=4&iss=10
(registration required)
World Health Organization. Global
cancer rates could increase by 50% to 15 million by 2020. April
3, 2003. Retrieved November 11, 2004 from: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2003/pr27/en/
Yang K, Wen Y, Wang C. [Clinical
application of anticancer nanoparticles targeting metastasis foci
of cervical lymph nodes in patients with oral carcinoma] Hua
Xi Kou Qiang Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2003;21:447-50. Chinese.
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