Alan Houghton, M.D., chief of immunology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York
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This my Theory to Date as of 6/5/2009.
I will be sending out a Very, Very long list of ACKNOLOGEMENTS.
"In melanoma patients treated with CTLA-4 blockade, not only were more T cells specific for melanoma antigens present, but those CTL were more likely to be polyfunctional — thus more likely to be effective at destroying the tumor — and those patients were much more likely to have regression of their tumors than in people without CTLA-4 blockade.
So the concept that TRegs — or some other inhibitory effect associated with CTLA-4 — suppress anti-tumor immune responses is likely to be correct, and it seems that at least in some cases it’s possible to override that inhibition and drive T cells to once again attack the tumor effectively. When that happens, cancer can be cured. It’s just a question of being able to do this on a consistent basis. Unfortunately, that’s still the hard part."
Unknown
“There are three parts of the equation in a clinical trial. There’s who has control, who gets the reward, and who takes the risk. Patients take all the risk, they have no control, and they get no reward. Patients ought to be the ones driving the process and get the reward out of it and have the control, since they are the ones that take the risk.”
Greg Simons
“Don’t ever give up. Don’t ever give up.” “Cancer can take away all my physical abilities. It can not take away my mind, it can not take away my heart, and it can not take away my soul”.
Jimmy Valvano from his speech during the 1993 ESPN ESPY Awards
I have so many papers that I don't recall where I got the above quote.
My Hope is that this doesn't fall on deaf ears.
Take care
Jimmy B
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