THE MOSS REPORTS
More than thirty years have elapsed since the war on cancer
was officially declared by President Nixon. Yet despite the enormous
effort expended in terms of manpower, resources and money, we are
no closer to winning the war than we were on the day it was declared.
New drugs are constantly being approved, but while it is true that
many of these drugs can cause a temporary shrinkage in tumor size,
very few have yet been found that will eradicate any kind of cancer
permanently. When the temporary shrinkage of tumors without any
prospect of real prolongation of life can generate so much profit
for drug companies there is little incentive for them to investigate
different, less toxic approaches that may offer a real chance of
influencing the outcome in many cancers.
Dr. Ralph Moss has spent the past thirty years monitoring the field
of oncology, investigating the scientific basis of both conventional
and alternative cancer treatments. He has written more than 200
reports - the Moss Reports
- on various kinds of cancer. Each of these reports offers a thorough
analysis not just of the standard treatments for a particular type
of cancer but also the full range of useful alternative and complementary
treatments that, because they do not promise vast financial rewards
to the drug companies, have yet to find a place in mainstream medicine.
To order a Moss Report, or
to schedule a phone consultation with Dr. Ralph Moss, please call
Diane at 1-800-980-1234
(814-238-3367 when calling from outside
the US). You can also order reports through
our website, http://www.cancerdecisions.com
LOSING THE WAR ON CANCER
An article of great importance has appeared in Fortune magazine.
It is titled "Why We're Losing the War on Cancer." The
author, Clifton Leaf, is Executive Editor of the magazine and is
himself a survivor of adolescent Hodgkin's disease. So he is no
stranger to cancer or to the potential of modern treatment to cure
some of its less common manifestations.
Leaf recognizes that he himself was extraordinarily lucky in surviving.
But he still has the courage to ask, "Why have we made so little
progress in the war on cancer?" He readily acknowledges the
flood of recent favorable publicity for drugs such as Gleevec, Herceptin,
Iressa, Erbitux and most recently Avastin. "[T]he cure has
seemed closer than ever," he says.
"But it's not," he continues. "Hope and optimism,
so essential to this fight, have masked some very real systemic
problems that have made this complex, elusive, relentless foe even
harder to defeat…[W]e are far from winning the war. So far
away, in fact, that it looks like losing."
Leaf gives some facts about cancer that are well known to insiders
but will come as a shock to many readers:
- More Americans will die of cancer in the next 14
months than have died from every war that the US has fought…combined.
- Cancer is about to replace heart disease as the
number one US killer. It is already the biggest killer in many
age groups.
- Even adjusting for age, the percentage of Americans
dying from cancer is about the same as it was in 1971 (when Nixon
declared the war on cancer) or even back in 1950! Meanwhile, age-adjusted
deaths from heart disease have been slashed by 59 percent and
from stroke by 69 percent during that same half-century.
- The much-vaunted improvement in survival from cancer
is largely a myth. "Survival gains for the more common forms
of cancer are measured in additional months of life," says
Leaf, "not years."
- Most of the improvement in longevity of cancer
patients can be attributed to life style changes (the promotion
of which has not been a conspicuous priority for the National
Cancer Institute) and especially to early detection.
- The few dramatic breakthroughs (such as in Hodgkin's
disease) mainly occurred in the early days of the war on cancer.
There has been little substantial progress in recent decades…despite
nearly ubiquitous claims to the contrary.
- According to one biostatistician at M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center, long-term survival from common cancers such as
prostate, breast, colorectal and lung "has barely budged
since the 1970s."
- According to Andy Grove, the chairman of
the Intel corporation and a major "player" in funding
research, "It's like a Greek tragedy. Everybody plays his
individual part to perfection, everybody does what's right by
his own life, and the total just doesn't work."
Today, Leaf concludes, the cancer effort is "utterly fragmented
- so much so that it's nearly impossible to track down where the
money to pay for all this research is coming from." And what
money! Leaf estimates that US $14.4 billion is spent each year on
cancer research. "When you add it all up, Americans have spent…close
to $200 billion, in inflation-adjusted dollars, since 1971."
It is certainly justifiable to ask for an accounting of that one-fifth
of a trillion dollars.
Irrelevant Research
What have we gotten for that huge sum? In fact, research has become
increasingly irrelevant to the real-life problems faced by cancer
patients. "The narrower the research niche," says Leaf,
"the greater the rewards the researcher is likely to attain."
Particularly thought-provoking is his assertion that cancer research
is fundamentally flawed in its orientation. Cancer scientists have
self-confidently created "animal models" and artificial
cell lines that supposedly mimic an equivalent human disease, such
as breast, colon or lung cancer. These scientists then triumphantly
"cure" cancer in these laboratory models. But cell lines
and tumors growing in mice are drastically different from spontaneous
human tumors, the kind that afflict us and our loved ones. A flawed
model is not likely to yield useful results. Those who closely follow
the cancer field have become inured to an endless series of "breakthroughs"
in mice that almost never pan out when tried in the clinic.
According to one of America's most celebrated cancer researchers,
Dr. Robert Weinberg of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT), "a fundamental problem which remains to be solved in
the whole cancer research effort, in terms of therapies, is that
the pre-clinical models of human cancer, in large part, stink."
Prof. Bruce Chabner of Harvard University expressed similar frustration:
"Cancer researchers say, 'I've got a model for lung cancer!'
Well," says Chabner, "it ain't a model for lung cancer,
because lung cancer in humans has a hundred mutations. It looks
like the most complicated thing you've ever seen genetically."
Why then are these artificial and intrinsically misleading systems
still being used? The answer is simple. These artificial models
are "…very convenient, easily manipulated," says
Vishva Dixit of the Genentech company. "You can assess tumor
size just by looking at [them, ed.]." There's no thought, still
less acknowledgement, given to the fact that shrinking a tumor,
especially in a mouse, has little to say about human survival or
well-being.
"Hundreds of millions of dollars are being wasted every year
by drug companies using these models," says Weinberg. But with
the huge profits to be made from tumor-shrinking drugs like Avastin,
Erbitux and oxaliplatin, what incentive do they have to stop?
Shrinking Tumors
Leaf also tackles the subject of cancer regression, or shrinkage
of tumors, pointing out that it is a totally inadequate measure
of the effectiveness of a drug. (This is a theme I dealt with in
depth in my book, Questioning
Chemotherapy, and many times since then.) "It is exciting
to see a tumor shrink in mouse or man and know that a drug is doing
that, "says Leaf. "It is a measurable goal." But,
he adds, "tumor regression by itself is actually a lousy predictor
for the progression of disease." The sad truth is that "regression
is not likely to improve a person's chances of survival." Read
those words over carefully - you do not encounter such ideas often
in mainstream publications.
By contrast, what really matters, says Leaf, is stopping metastases
(secondary growths), which kill the great majority of cancer patients.
"So you'd think that cancer researchers would have been bearing
down on this insidious phenomenon for years," he says. In reality
quite the opposite is true. Fortune magazine's examination
of NCI grants, going back to 1972, revealed that less than 0.5 percent
of study proposals focused primarily on metastases. Half of one
percent! Of nearly 8,900 grant proposals awarded last year, 92 percent
didn't even mention the word metastasis.
According to I.J. (Josh) Fidler of M.D. Anderson, the study of
metastases is avoided by cancer researchers because it is a tough
and so far unfruitful field, and not likely to yield quick and easy
results. Instead, researchers focus on techniques and avenues that
they know will produce measurable results in the laboratory. The
attitude, Fidler says, is "Here's an antibody I will use, and
here's blah-blah-blah-blah, and then I get the money." (Fidler,
to his great credit, has published over 250 scientific articles
on combatting metastases.)
The current crop of new drugs comes in for scathing criticism as
well. A study done in Europe showed that twelve new anticancer drugs
approved in Europe between 1995 and 2000 were no better in terms
of improving survival, quality of life, or safety than those they
replaced. But as far as the drug companies were concerned they had
one big advantage: they were several times more expensive to purchase
than the old drugs. "In one case," says Leaf, "the
price was 350 times higher."
Leaf points out that two new blockbuster drugs, Avastin and Erbitux,
are lacking in substantial effectiveness. Avastin, he says, "managed
to extend the lives of some 400 patients with terminal colorectal
cancer by 4.7 months." And Erbitux? "Although it did indeed
shrink tumors, it has not been shown to prolong patients' lives
at all." Still, a weekly dose costs $2,400.
The article then features a list of "Miracle Cures That
Weren't," including radiation therapy, interferon, interleukin-2,
endostatin and Gleevec. As Leaf himself admits, Fortune
itself once featured Interleukin-2 on its cover with a huge headline
reading: "Cancer Breakthrough."
Yet despite the profound importance of what Leaf has to say in
this article, you are unlikely to see the article cited as front-page
news. I was dismayed to find that, this morning, for example, the
total number of citations at Google News for this article was three
(out of 4,500 news sources). By comparison, at the time of its announcement
Erbitux was generating over 1,000 articles per day in the same search
engine.
Leaf's article can be ordered online at http://www.fortune.com/fortune/articles/0,15114,598435,00.html
(The March issue of Fortune in which it appeared
may still be available at some newsstands.) However, excellent though
this article is, and delighted though I am to see this subject aired
so prominently, I do regret the fact that Leaf did not take his
arguments quite far enough. For instance, he includes a section
on "how to win the war," but this seems anemic and hard
to follow compared to his previous incisive analysis. In my opinion,
he doesn't deal with the basic economic and political underpinnings
of the war on cancer. The emphasis on ever-more-profitable drugs
is dictated by the very nature of Big Pharma and its unhealthy
influence on the whole research and approval apparatus.
Also, Leaf fails to cite the most prominent critics of the war
on cancer, especially those with an orientation towards complementary
and alternative medicine (CAM). Thus, while he hits the nail squarely
on the head in many instances (as, for example, when he discusses
the danger of equating temporary tumor shrinkages with increased
survival), he also misses many other important aspects of the problem
that are well known to people who have followed this field for decades.
When he quotes a scientist as saying, "We have a shortage
of good ideas," this is likely to elicit incredulity from the
CAM community. There are scores of excellent researchers who have
proposed exciting new ideas for treating cancer over the last few
decades. Most of them have been ignored or dismissed out of hand.
Some have even been persecuted. My 1980 book, The Cancer
Industry, discussed eight such cases. A dozen years later
I published Cancer Therapy,
which contains reviews of over a hundred unconventional treatments,
most of which could still be usefully pursued. Many treatments discussed
in my book Antioxidants
Against Cancer have still not been examined, much less acted
upon.
Let me give one example of an original idea that has been studiously
ignored by the mainstream. I recently received a reprint from my
colleagues Eva and Laszlo Csatary, MD, of their latest results using
MTH-68. This treatment is based on the non-toxic Newcastle disease
virus vaccine and is seemingly quite beneficial in select cases,
especially in brain cancer. The article appears in the most recent
issue of the Journal of Neuro-Oncology, with co-authors from respected
institutions in Germany, Hungary and California. It is not the first
such article that Dr. Csatary has published. I myself co-authored
a best case series with him on this topic in 1999, which appeared
in a respected peer-reviewed journal. Admittedly, this is not exactly
a "new" idea, simply an unrecognized one. In fact, the
name of the compound, MTH-68, refers to the date of its discovery...1968,
three years before the war on cancer was launched, and before many
of today's cancer researchers were even born. Despite repeated articles
and letters, press releases, news conferences and appeals to governmental
authorities, this promising treatment has made little progress in
the world of conventional medicine. The response from the American
"cancer establishment" to the Csatarys' work has been
a thundering silence.
But this June, 25,000 oncologists will once again gather at the
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting for their annual
four-day convention. Don't expect any center-stage attention, though,
for promising non-toxic treatments, such as MTH-68, which could
provide true departures from the quagmire of the stalled war on
cancer. Even Mr. Leaf, for all his trenchant criticism, seems unaware
or unconcerned that there are many other treatments that are potentially
valuable, yet are being systematically ignored. And they will continue
to be ignored until the public, Congress and scientific community
wake up to the fact that the most powerful force driving cancer
research is Big Pharma's need for a hefty bottom line and a quick
return on its investments.
It is enough to make the angels weep.
--Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D.

References:
Csatary LK, Moss RW, Beuth J, et al.
Beneficial treatment of patients with advanced cancer using a Newcastle
disease virus vaccine (MTH-68/H). Anticancer Res. 1999
Jan-Feb;19(1B):635-8.
Csatary LK, Gosztonyi G, Szeberenyi J,
et al. MTH-68/H Oncolytic viral treatment in human high-grade
gliomas. Journal of Neuro-Oncology 2004;67:83-93.
Leaf, Clifford. Why we're
losing the war on cancer. Fortune 2004;149(6):76-97.
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