Using POLIO to cure CANCER - glioblastoma (brain tumour)

james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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Like many original ideas, Matthias Gromeier's notion that polio might kill cancer tumors was met with disdain. But two decades later, the use of the virus known for crippling and killing millions is showing promise against one of the most virulent forms of cancer -- glioblastoma brain tumors. Two patients Scott Pelley meets in the first clinical trial for the treatment have been declared cancer free by doctors. Pelley's report, in which 60 Minutes cameras spent 10 months capturing patients receiving the therapy and learning of its effects, will be broadcast on Sunday, March 29 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.




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Stephanie Lipscomb
"I got a range of responses, from crazy to you're lying...most people just thought it was too dangerous," says Gromeier, a molecular biologist, when he started pushing his idea to attack tumors with the polio virus. One of those naysayers was Dr. Henry Friedman, a neuro-oncologist who is the deputy director of the Brain Tumor Center at Duke University.

"I thought he was nuts," Friedman tells Pelley. "I really thought he was using a weapon that produced paralysis." That was 15 years ago. Today, after research, animal trials and now this human clinical trial, he is more than optimistic. "This, to me, is the most promising therapy I have seen in my career, period." Friedman has been researching a cure for glioblastoma for more than 30 years.

Gromeier's research yielded a genetically modified polio virus that could be used safely in animals and now, it seems, in humans. He explains how it works. "All human cancers, they develop...protective measures that make them invisible to the immune system and this is precisely what we try to reverse with our virus," he says. "We are actually removing this protective shield...enabling the immune system to come in and attack."

60 Minutes cameras spent nearly a year chronicling the ups and downs of this bold experiment. As the researchers struggled to determine how the virus would behave, their hard decisions sometimes led to tragic consequences for participating patients. Eleven of the 22 participants in the experiment succumbed to their diseases.

Now, doctors believe the re-engineered polio virus starts killing the tumor, but that the body's own immune system does the real killing. And in two patients suffering from glioblastoma, a notoriously fast growing and lethal form of brain cancer, doctors cannot detect cancer three years after they received the polio virus therapy.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/polio-used-to-treat-cancer-60-minutes/
 

james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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I found this very interesting.

In a way, it makes sense given how polio works. If it can be used in a proper way, it sure is interesting.

Thought I would post it just because it was so intriguing and if by chance anyone out there in the ether may be fighting this first hand.

I know that if I was facing certain death by way of brain cancer, I'd be looking to give this a shot.
 

Aardvark154

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Thanks JTK very interesting. Must say that from my non-physician but with an aunt who died of polio right before the vaccines perspective, I'd have agreed with Dr. Friedman's original feeling, very pleased that viewpoint has been proved wrong.
 

rafterman

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Feb 15, 2004
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Interesting story brings to mind Thalidomide which has found a second life as a treatment for certain cancers (myeloma).
 

james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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Thanks JTK very interesting. Must say that from my non-physician but with an aunt who died of polio right before the vaccines perspective, I'd have agreed with Dr. Friedman's original feeling, very pleased that viewpoint has been proved wrong.
I remember reading that polio would leave young people with one leg shorter than the other because the one leg would stop growing. I wonder if this has anything to do with it. Stopping the uncontrolled replication of cells.
 

nobody123

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Feb 1, 2012
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I am, of course, too lazy to look it up, but there were other recent studies (real, legitimate scientific studies) with promising results examining the use of other viral infections as a way to fight cancer. I think the cold or rhinovirus may have been one of them. The mechanism of the treatment was different than with this latest one. The older studies simply stimulated that body's immune response by making it start to fight off an infection and - theoretically - continue on to fight off the cancer as well. Or somesuch. I prolly don't recall it all correctly. At any rate, I hope this counter-intuitive path leads to some way-effective treatments. I love the happy shiny future medical stories that actually pan out!
 
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