Friday, May 31, 2013

Gene Therapy

Cancer treatments have evolved over the years to the point that a diagnosis is no longer a kiss of death. For some cancers, it may still be something of a kiss of death; however, many others can be treated with a variety of treatments. A newer form of treatment is gene therapy.

Gene therapy, unlike other treatments, does not involve chemicals or radiation being thrown at the body. Instead, it uses the simple idea of getting the tumor or cancerous growth to take on the genetic makeup of say the common cold or measles or some illness we can treat effectively. Once the growth has taken on the genetic make up of the cold or whatever it is given, the treatment used to dispel that illness is administered. The theory is that if it works when it is not in tumor form, it should work in tumor form as well.

While the idea is lovely, it has not experienced as much success as one would think. In the mid to late 1990s, there was a clinical trial for curing mesothelioma utilizing this method. Of all of the people who underwent gene therapy to eradicate mesothelioma, only one woman, an Australian woman in her mid 20s, was the only one to survive. The good news is that she also beat the cancer so it was very successful in her case.

Other areas, besides mesothelioma, have seen more success. It is now being suggested that the measles virus may be very effective at treating prostate cancer. The common cold has also been effectively deployed into tumors to change their identity and cure cancer.

Gene therapy does sometimes work but it is much further away from being a sure thing than either radiation or chemotherapy. One of the biggest problems is that we have to be able to cure the disease we give the cancer cells. If we are unable to cure the disease quickly and effectively, the person can end up with cancer and measles or the flu or whatever else cancer is turned into.

In order to effectively change cancer into a disease, the second disease must have its own DNA. For that reason, bacteria and viruses are both open to the idea of being implanted. The problem with many viruses, however, is that they are less easily knocked out by a variety of antibiotics.

For more information on the world of cancer treatment and research, please visit http://www.mesolawsuit.com.

Joseph Devine

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Joseph_Devine
http://EzineArticles.com/?Gene-Therapy&id=1937343

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