Covid mRNA vaccines helps cancer patients to live longer

jalimon

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Jan 10, 2016
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We all know that the mRNA vaccine technology was first developed as a treatment for many forms of cancer. To replace costly, very painful, and often deadly chemotherapy.

It turned out because of COVID that the technology could be used for this brand new virus called COVID. For which an mRNA vaccine was developed and administered (13 billion doses).

A very interesting study by nature.com was just published that confirms people with cancer, who received the mRNA covid vaccines live 1 year longer than those who did not get vaccinated by the mRNA vaccine.

Proving that the basis of this vaccine, which is to wake up cells, is actually positive (I would have said 'working' but science is much more complicated than that).

Fascinating, isn't it?
 
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Insidious Von

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Sep 12, 2007
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Fascinating indeed, the technology into protein inhibitors has produced Brukinsa and Ozempic.

In science a development that helps a system is found to be beneficial in another field. I hope that mRNA is effective and can spare cancer patients the gruesome effects of chemotherapy. I did nine rounds of it, I'll spare the gory details...don't want to put people off their food.

 

jalimon

Well-known member
Jan 10, 2016
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Fascinating indeed, the technology into protein inhibitors has produced Brukinsa and Ozempic.

In science a development that helps a system is found to be beneficial in another field. I hope that mRNA is effective and can spare cancer patients the gruesome effects of chemotherapy. I did nine rounds of it, I'll spare the gory details...don't want to put people off their food.
I have a particular interest in the field because I worked a lot on a database for the American Society of Immunology.

But 25 years of related work in healthcare (always in IT for my part) did confirm to me that surviving cancer is not really surviving cancer but the gruelling and horrible task of surviving chemotherapy.

The day we have a full vaccine available to kill cells that cause cancer will be a great accomplishment. Yes, there will be some inconveniences, some bad reactions to the vaccines, as with any vaccines. But never as bad as chemotherapy.
 

nottyboi

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May 14, 2008
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Russia is close to perfecting custom MRNA vaccines to treat cancer. I think there are 2 reasons for this. 1 - to help people, 2. to fuck western Pharma companies. The idea is to quickly be able to ID key DNA markers on the cancer and create an MRNA vax that targets them.
 
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Coochy

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Sep 19, 2025
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My doctor said this year you don't need the covid shot but make sure you get the Flu shot. Says the strain has weakened.
 

nottyboi

Well-known member
May 14, 2008
26,117
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I have a particular interest in the field because I worked a lot on a database for the American Society of Immunology.

But 25 years of related work in healthcare (always in IT for my part) did confirm to me that surviving cancer is not really surviving cancer but the gruelling and horrible task of surviving chemotherapy.

The day we have a full vaccine available to kill cells that cause cancer will be a great accomplishment. Yes, there will be some inconveniences, some bad reactions to the vaccines, as with any vaccines. But never as bad as chemotherapy.
Sure the current treatment is to kill both the cancer and the patient and hope the cancer goes first. If not they let you recover and hope you recover faster then the cancer.. and then go again.
 

HungSowel

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Mar 3, 2017
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The breakthrough was cracking the protein folding problem using machine learning. Back in 2020 there was 2 AI models that worked well enough for the covid vaccine. Now there must be a thousand AI models that can fold proteins like it is oragami.
 
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