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cientists at Oxford University have tamed a virus so that it attacks and destroys cancer cells but does not harm healthy cells. They determined how to produce replication-competent viruses with key toxicities removed, providing a new platform for development of improved cancer treatments and better vaccines for a broad range of viral diseases.
The present study was intended mainly to explore and demonstrate the potential of this new mechanism to regulate virus activity. Although the current tumor-killing virus is useful in mice, transfer of the technology into the clinical setting will require re-engineering of the virus to overcome virus pathologies seen in humans, and it will be at least two years before this can be tested in the clinics
Originally posted by Republican08
So it'd be two years before it can be used on humans,
Originally posted by Walkswithfish
Originally posted by Republican08
So it'd be two years before it can be used on humans,
Got to give the big pharmacological companies time to lessen the effectiveness of this new treatment and combine it with nearly lethal doses of expensive chemo-therapies which are highly profitable.
Originally posted by Republican08
The present study was intended mainly to explore and demonstrate the potential of this new mechanism to regulate virus activity. Although the current tumor-killing virus is useful in mice, transfer of the technology into the clinical setting will require re-engineering of the virus to overcome virus pathologies seen in humans, and it will be at least two years before this can be tested in the clinics
www.sciencedaily.com...
So it'd be two years before it can be used on humans, and what affect that may have I'm not sure.
It didn't mention what kind of cancers, is it every cancer or just certain ones?