200 years of cancer research in perspective.

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200 years of cancer research in perspective.

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  • jenrio
    jenrio Member Posts: 558
    edited August 2012

    Depression warning!!!   Don't read on if you can't handle facts.

    ======================================== 

    Recently the stage IV forum has been a sad place to visit with several active members and young members' passing.   Reality of cancer is not pink and pretty. When I feel the reality weighing on me, I remember 3 things:

    1.   Cancer does not grow linearly.  It grows exponentially.   That sucks

    2.   Guess another thing that grows nonlinearly?   Computer power and affordability.  

    3.   Our knowledge does not grow linearly.   In the last 10 years, MBC death rate (5 year) has been dropping around 1% a year, which comes to about 30%-50% 5 year survival rate currently.  This is bad.   BUT, we must not extrapolate into the next 10 years that 5-year survival rate will be 40%-60%.   It could be better than that, may be worse than that.   We need to harness nonlinear progress in technologies to battle this nonlinear disease called cancer.

    This is an article from NEJM, chronicling progress in cancer research.  We do not have a cure, but we will get there.  Sooner or later.   With clinical trials and support for fundamental research and urgency in reforming the process of clinical trials, we will be there sooner rather than later.

    http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMra1204479

  • jenrio
    jenrio Member Posts: 558
    edited August 2012
    True innovation or Fake innovation?
     
    I kind of agree that some innovations are impressive sounding but increase costs without bringing significant benefit.    BUT:   every breakthrough has humbler beginnings.   Davinci robots is NOT the end of robotic innovation in surgery or other healthcare field.   It's just one of the first application of a nonlinear technology that will one day transform the world.
     
    Check out this video of a girl whose life is transformed by robotics, human machine interface and 3-D printing.   One day I may need this technology too:

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