10/01/2018
From The New York Times:
2018 Nobel Prize in Medicine Awarded to 2 Cancer Immunotherapy
By Denise Grady
Oct. 1, 2018The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded on Monday to James P. Allison of the United States and Tasuku Honjo of Japan for their work on unleashing the body’s immune system to attack cancer, a breakthrough that has led to an entirely new class of drugs and brought lasting remissions to many patients who had run out of options.
Their success, which came after many researchers had given up on the idea, “brought immunotherapy out from decades of skepticism,” said Dr. Jedd Wolchok, a cancer specialist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. It has, he said, “led to human applications that have affected an untold number of people’s health.”
Before Dr. Allison’s and Dr. Honjo’s discoveries, cancer treatment consisted of surgery, radiation, chemotherapy and hormonal treatments. A statement from the Nobel committee hailed their accomplishments as establishing “an entirely new principle for cancer therapy.”
The drugs based on their work belong to a class called checkpoint inhibitors, with tongue-twisting names that have nonetheless become familiar to many patients. The first ones approved were ipilimumab (brand name Yervoy), nivolumab (Opdivo) and pembrolizumab (Keytruda). Others have since come to market.
Earlier attempts by other researchers to recruit the immune system to fight cancer sometimes worked but more often did not. Dr. Allison and Dr. Honjo succeeded where others had failed by deciphering exactly how cells were interacting so they could fine-tune methods to control the immune system.
Checkpoint inhibitors do not work for everyone and they have only been approved for some cancers. They can have severe side effects, and they are expensive, costing more than $100,000 a year. But the approach, known as immunotherapy, has become a mainstay of treatment for a number of types of cancer, and a great deal of research is underway — including work by Dr. Allison and Dr. Honjo — to find the best ways of combining checkpoint inhibitors with one another and with standard treatments to help more patients.
The checkpoint inhibitors now on the market are used for cancers of the lung, kidney, bladder, head and neck; for the aggressive skin cancer melanoma; and for Hodgkin lymphoma and other cancers.
When will old white men like Allison and Honjo stop exercising their privilege by saving lives? Why don’t they hurry up and die so that the Diverse can take over? As Matthew Dowd of ABC pointed out yesterday, white male Christians like Allison and Honjo are in the way. (As we all know, the only reason 18 Japanese men have won hard science Nobels since 2000 is their white Christian privilege.)
Wikipedia reveals Allison was a frat boy, no doubt another drunken one:
Allison earned a B.S. in microbiology from University of Texas, Austin in 1969, where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
That’s Brett Kavanaugh’s frat!
And we have all learned lately that anybody who ever had a beer during their teen years is wrecked for life.
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.