medicalcondition:disease

  • FANTOM5 releases atlas of human gene expression | RIKEN
    http://www.riken.jp/en/pr/press/2014/20140327_1

    FANTOM, a large international consortium led by RIKEN releases today the first comprehensive map of gene activity across the human body, and provides the first holistic view of the complex networks that regulate gene expression across the wide variety of cell types that make up a human being. These findings will help in the identification of genes involved in disease and the development of personalized and regenerative medicine.

    After many years of concerted effort to systematically analyze the expression of genes in all human cells and tissues, RIKEN and the FANTOM consortium publish the findings today in two landmark Nature reports, and 16 related articles in ten other scholarly journals (ref.1,2,3).

    The papers published in Nature describe maps of promoters and enhancers – short regions of DNA that influence the activity of genes - encoded in the human genome, and their activity across the vast wealth of human cell types and tissues of the human body. Together with the other studies published by FANTOM5, this data provides the first complete view of the networks regulating transcription across all cell types.

    La liste des papiers sur le site du projet FANTOM avec les liens (derrière #paywall)

    #génome #cancer

  • Children’s environmental health: a critical challenge of our time
    http://download.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/lancet/PIIS0140673614604682.pdf?id=aaaNyCzJkc-tT5fBus-su

    Children bear the brunt of the failure of governments to address environmental threats: according to WHO, 36% of all childhood deaths globally are attributable to environmental causes and 43% of the total environmental burden of disease falls upon children younger than 5 years.

    (...)

    There are now many examples of the fetus, infant, and young child being affected by low levels of environmental toxicants, inadequate nutrition, and stress that have no apparent effects in adults.

    This is because, in early life, detoxification and repair pathways are immature, and the complicated, rapid process of early development is easily disrupted, often with lasting consequences. There has also been much progress in understanding the mechanisms by which environmental exposures can lead to disease, not only by inflicting genetic damage that results in alterations in the structure and sequence of genes, but also by dysregulating the epigenetic programming of gene expression during critical developmental stages.

    Evidence is emerging that environmental exposures that occur prenatally can affect health and disease over the life course and even over future generations. This is a promising moment for translation of scientific evidence to preventive policy, starting with meaningful reform of laws that regulate toxic chemicals and pesticides.

    #enfants #santé #environnement #toxiques #Etats

  • More than just bacteria: The importance of microbial diversity in gut health and disease - Eurekalert
    http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2014-03/aga-mtj030714.php

    Raffa

    More than just bacteria: The importance of microbial diversity in gut health and disease - Eurekalert - http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_rel...

    6 seconds ago

    from Bookmarklet

    Comment

    Like

    The microbial communities that reside in the human gut and their impact on human health and disease are one of the most exciting new areas of research today. - Raffa

  • Prostate surgery edges slightly ahead of ’watchful waiting’ in study - CNN.com
    http://edition.cnn.com/2014/03/05/health/prostate-surgery-study

    When it comes to prostate cancer, aggressive surgery saves lives and leads to a better quality of life, according to a new study that could inflame the debate over how best to treat the disease — and in some cases, whether to treat it at all.
    The paper, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, is an update on a study that was launched in Sweden, Finland and Iceland a quarter-century ago. Nearly 700 men newly diagnosed with prostate cancer were split into two groups: half had their prostate gland fully removed — a radical prostatectomy — and half were followed through a protocol of “watchful waiting,” where doctors only treated them if symptoms progressed.
    On average, men who underwent immediate surgery lived longer, were less likely to see the cancer spread and had fewer complications from the disease. The longevity benefit was greatest for men in their 50s and early 60s, where over an 18-year period, surgery cut the death rate by more than a third.

    Le papier d’origine #paywall
    Radical Prostatectomy or Watchful Waiting in Early Prostate Cancer — NEJM
    http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1311593

    RESULTS
    During 23.2 years of follow-up, 200 of 347 men in the surgery group and 247 of the 348 men in the watchful-waiting group died. Of the deaths, 63 in the surgery group and 99 in the watchful-waiting group were due to prostate cancer; the relative risk was 0.56 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.41 to 0.77; P=0.001), and the absolute difference was 11.0 percentage points (95% CI, 4.5 to 17.5). The number needed to treat to prevent one death was 8. One man died after surgery in the radical-prostatectomy group. Androgen-deprivation therapy was used in fewer patients who underwent prostatectomy (a difference of 25.0 percentage points; 95% CI, 17.7 to 32.3). The benefit of surgery with respect to death from prostate cancer was largest in men younger than 65 years of age (relative risk, 0.45) and in those with intermediate-risk prostate cancer (relative risk, 0.38). However, radical prostatectomy was associated with a reduced risk of metastases among older men (relative risk, 0.68; P=0.04).
    CONCLUSIONS
    Extended follow-up confirmed a substantial reduction in mortality after radical prostatectomy; the number needed to treat to prevent one death continued to decrease when the treatment was modified according to age at diagnosis and tumor risk. A large proportion of long-term survivors in the watchful-waiting group have not required any palliative treatment.

    La suite de l’article de CNN rend la lecture plus confuse, car il donne la parole à des spécialistes non signataires de l’étude qui donnent leurs points de vue. Essentiellement,

    Carroll agrees that mortality is only part of the picture and says the new study underscores a need to better differentiate between high- and low-risk cancers.

    Yapuka…

  • #Cancer mortality worldwide mapped
    http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/interactive/2014/feb/14/cancer-mortality-worldwide-mapped

    Global cancer death rates are more than 50% higher in men than women, according to figures published today by Cancer Research UK. The numbers show that 4.6m men die from the disease every year – equivalent to 126 men in every 100,000, compared to around 3.5m women – 82 women per 100,000. The statistics compiled by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, have been announced alongside a new interactive map by Cancer Research UK, which compares cancer statistics from around the world. The map shows the variation in incidence, mortality and the reliability of the data in each country and region.

    You can find both the mortality and incidence maps below. Click on a country to see its data. You can also select to see the map by cancer type or by gender

    http://publications.cancerresearchuk.org/downloads/Product/CS_INFOG_WORLD_MORT.PDF

    http://publications.cancerresearchuk.org/downloads/Product/CS_INFOG_WORLD_INC.PDF

  • Cancer du sein : inutilité de la mammographie par rapport à un examen sans mammographie. Au contraire, effet négatif puisqu’un cancer sur cinq détecté par mammographie serait un «sur-diagnostic».
    Suivi sur 25 ans de cinq ans de dépistage en 1980-85 au Canada
    Twenty five year follow-up for breast cancer incidence and mortality of the Canadian National Breast Screening Study: randomised screening trial | BMJ
    http://www.bmj.com/content/348/bmj.g366
    (l’ensemble de l’article est consultable)

    Results
    During the five year screening period, 666 invasive breast cancers were diagnosed in the mammography arm (n=44 925 participants) and 524 in the controls (n=44 910), and of these, 180 women in the mammography arm and 171 women in the control arm died of breast cancer during the 25 year follow-up period. The overall hazard ratio for death from breast cancer diagnosed during the screening period associated with mammography was 1.05 (95% confidence interval 0.85 to 1.30). The findings for women aged 40-49 and 50-59 were almost identical. During the entire study period, 3250 women in the mammography arm and 3133 in the control arm had a diagnosis of breast cancer, and 500 and 505, respectively, died of breast cancer. Thus the cumulative mortality from breast cancer was similar between women in the mammography arm and in the control arm (hazard ratio 0.99, 95% confidence interval 0.88 to 1.12). After 15 years of follow-up a residual excess of 106 cancers was observed in the mammography arm, attributable to over-diagnosis.

    Conclusion
    Annual mammography in women aged 40-59 does not reduce mortality from breast cancer beyond that of physical examination or usual care when adjuvant therapy for breast cancer is freely available. Overall, 22% (106/484) of screen detected invasive breast cancers were over-diagnosed, representing one over-diagnosed breast cancer for every 424 women who received mammography screening in the trial.

    http://www.bmj.com/highwire/filestream/686204/field_highwire_fragment_image_m/0/F3.medium.gif
    Fig 3 Breast cancer specific mortality, by assignment to mammography or control arms (all participants)

    • Pour mémoire, sur Ameli.fr
      Mammographie de dépistage du cancer du sein - ameli-santé
      http://www.ameli-sante.fr/cancer-du-sein/depistage-cancer-du-sein.html

      Une femme sur huit développe un cancer du sein au cours de sa vie. C’est entre 50 et 74 ans que les femmes sont le plus exposées. Il est donc important qu’elles bénéficient de la mammographie de dépistage : un moyen efficace, simple et gratuit pour détecter un cancer du sein le plus tôt possible.

    • Wéé, #bonne_nouvelle ! Résumé : mieux vaut se faire palper les seins régulièrement que de souffrir cet écrasement médicalisé ! #cancer #mammographie #technologie_médicale #business

      Cela me rappelle une sage femme qui voulait absolument installer un monitoring pour une naissance à la maison alors qu’avec un simple #stéthoscope_en_bois elle avait entendu que l’enfant était une fille. Il faut donc plus de gynécologues, des formations spécifiques et surtout redonner de la confiance à la pratique médical plutôt qu’aux robots.

    • Proponents of mammograms often point out that women whose breast cancer is diagnosed by mammography alone live longer than those whose cancer is diagnosed by physical exam. This study found that as well, but the apparent advantage was illusory, the researchers concluded. For one thing, if a cancer is sufficiently aggressive and resistant to treatment it will likely prove fatal no matter when it is detected. Finding it in 2011 by physical exam, as opposed to 2007 by mammogram, simply means that the woman lives longer knowing that she has cancer, not that she lives longer overall.

      Mammograms, the study found, increase perceived survival time without affecting the course of the disease.

      http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/02/12/us-mammograms-idUSBREA1B1RJ20140212

    • #mammographie, la #stratégie_du_doute à l’œuvre, sur FoxNews. Ça n’a pas loupé, dès le titre Controversial study

      Controversial mammogram study : What you need to know | Fox News
      http://www.foxnews.com/health/2014/03/03/controversial-mammogram-study-what-need-to-know

      While the study authors say the women were randomly placed in either the mammogram group or the control group, some members of the medical community claim that, after examining the women at the onset of the study, nurses may have put women with larger cancers into the mammogram group so they would receive better care and improve their odds of survival, says Dr. Marisa Weiss, president and founder of Breastcancer.org

      Le site en question, sous des aspects balancés, incite vivement et « scientifiquement » à recourir à la mammographie.
      Ce qu’il faut retenir sur le sujet d’après ce site « objectif » (je n’ai retenu que les titres)
      Mammography : Benefits, Risks, What You Need to Know
      http://www.breastcancer.org/symptoms/testing/types/mammograms/benefits_risks

      Five important things to know about mammograms
      1. They can save your life.
      2. Don’t be afraid.
      3. Get the best quality you can. ults.
      4. Mammography is our most powerful breast cancer detection tool.
      5. An unusual result requiring further testing does not always mean you have breast cancer.

      Suivent (retour à FoxNews) d’autres arguments tout aussi attendus… et la qualité de la vie ? et le progrès technique ? en plus ça veut rien dire ! et c’est sans danger !

      Other Issues
      Even if this new research were based on a truly randomized trial, there are still some issues with it, says Weiss. For one thing, it looks only at survival—and not at other factors like quality of life.
      (…)
      Technology has also advanced quite a bit since the data was collected for this study.
      (…)
      As for the issue of over-diagnoses—and the fact that study authors say one in five of the tumors detected by mammography fall into this category—Weiss says there’s no one medical definition as to what that means exactly.
      (…)
      That said, the risk associated with getting a mammogram—namely, a small amount of exposure to radiation (about the same amount you’d get by getting an X-ray at your dentist’s office)—is minimal.

      DONC…

      So at this point, Weiss encourages all women over the age of 40 to keep their yearly mammogram appointment. “It’s irresponsible to say mammography doesn’t lead to improved survival based on this study,” says Weiss.

      On vous l’avait bien dit : ce sont des chercheurs, ils sont irresponsables !

  • Mapping the Nation: History and Cartography in Nineteenth-Century America, Schulten

    http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/M/bo13141427.html

    Mapping the Nation

    Susan Schulten

    In the nineteenth century, Americans began to use maps in radically new ways. For the first time, medical men mapped diseases to understand and prevent epidemics, natural scientists mapped climate and rainfall to uncover weather patterns, educators mapped the past to foster national loyalty among students, and Northerners mapped slavery to assess the power of the South. After the Civil War, federal agencies embraced statistical and thematic mapping in order to profile the ethnic, racial, economic, moral, and physical attributes of a reunified nation. By the end of the century, Congress had authorized a national archive of maps, an explici

    #cartographie #livre

  • A New Focus on Depression
    http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/23/a-new-focus-on-depression/?_r=0

    Although we have learned much about depression (...) we still don’t understand its fundamental cause. The old idea that the disease results from a deficiency of a single neurotransmitter like serotonin or dopamine is clearly simplistic and wrong.

    Maybe psychiatrists and neuroscientists have something to learn from the successful hunt for the Higgs boson.

    Of course a debilitating disease has nothing in common with a subatomic particle, except that both are mysterious and elusive. But it was those very qualities that inspired international teams of physicists to work together for years until they finally identified the boson last year.

    (...)

    But at a time when federal research funds are shrinking and major drug companies have all but shuttered their brain research programs, enlightened philanthropists and entrepreneurs are helping to open a promising new pathway for neuroscience research: collaboration among researchers willing and able to take thoughtful risks and solve big problems.

    #sciences #reseaux #travail_collaboratif

  • Fire in the Blood - Dylan Mohan Gray (2013)

    #film #documentaire sur les #brevets, la #santé, l’accès aux traitements… (vu sur NRK2 « piratée » grâce à l’extension firefox #ipfuck)

    j’ai livetwitté en regardant :

    @jamie_love @ZackieAchmat starring in #FireInTheBlood on NRK2 now

    FireInTheBlood is a story about statistics — millions of people died

    In 1996 Edwin Cameron was saved by ARVs “most astonishing experience of my life”

    price of ARVs were set by US markets — unreachably high

    @ZackieAchmat and others founded the #TAC to fight pharma apartheid - and illegally imported generic drugs to save lives

    “no difference in quality” between expensive patented drugs and generics

    @jamie_love in Washington says no one seemed to see the problem… USAID Natsios’ racist comment about Africans and watches

    “Where are the drugs? The drugs are where the disease is not. Where is the disease? The disease is where the drugs are not”

    “[Big Pharma] would still make a profit at 5c” — even Bill Clinton agrees (now)

    @ZackieAchmat announced that he would boycott ARVs until the SA govt would make them available for everyone

    “If a few million white people would not have access to treatment, someone would have asked the question” — says @jamie_love

    CIPLA was founded because India should be “self-reliant” for medicine - and Indira Gandhi rejected patents at the time

    “NO #PATENTS ON LIFESAVING MEDECINES” (poster)

    Yusuf Hamied’s extraordinary offer to the UN: drop patents on ARVs and save lives!— hyperprofitable pharma refused

    Big Pharma lying on research, costs and just about everything

    “those drugs from India”… in fact the US industry was already outsourcing to India

    The “counterfeit drugs” argument in pharma is also a way to create FUD

    “A dollar a day” — the @jamie_love / CIPLA deal got “clearly the magic number”

    With generics finally in, governance became the main issue

    “As a doctor it was my job to try and save my patients’ life” — Peter Mugyenyi, Kampala

    Ah, the CIPRO story! Double standards to the max!

    The Global Fund “was working with drug companies to limit access to drugs", then GW Bush went to invade Iraq & created PEPFAR

    “Uncharacteristically the White House had not consulted with Big Pharma” :) didn’t last long!

    “Higher price: fewer lives saved.” Generics made the prices plummet. The number of ppl on treatment exploded

    #TRIPS, #TPP, #ACTA, #TAFTA and all this shit are made to reinforce the reign of #patents and “sign death warrants”

    What happens “for the next generation of drugs”? … future “genocide” in the making - “We need to do something!”

    @jamie_love: “we don’t have to accept this future” “we can act”

    “Help prevent a sequel!” — fight TRIPS+ and all the IP shit

    http://fireintheblood.com devrait être projeté partout

    @Paul_da_Silva merci pour #IPFuck

    #sida #afrique_du_sud #ouganda #militer #brevets #propriété_intellectuelle

  • The global diabetes epidemic in charts | Data Dive
    http://blogs.reuters.com/data-dive/2013/11/15/the-world-diabetes-epidemic-in-charts

    Nearly one in ten people globally will have some form of diabetes by 2035, the International Diabetes Federation predicts in a new report. There are some 382 million people living with the disease, but that could jump 55% by 2035, the IDF says.

    #Diabète_sucré #santé

  • Misdeeds & Disease: How Similar Are Disgust & Moral Disgust? - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/misdeeds--disease-how-similar-are-disgust--moral-disgust

    Feliciano Guimaraes via FlickrThe news earlier this fall that chemical weapons had been used in Syria’s civil was seen as a new low in that conflict. Many people condemned their use as “disgusting”; President Obama, making the case for a military response, said the images from the attack were “sickening.”Moral outrage sometimes demands the language of disgust. In the case of serious and grave wrongdoing, it feels appropriate that physical revulsion overlaps with moral repulsion.Are physical and (...)

  • How Aflac built an empire on Japan’s unspeakable nightmare : #cancer – Quartz
    http://qz.com/114832/aflac-japan-cancer-insurance

    Japan already has compulsory national health insurance which covers cancer treatments. But supplemental insurance of the sort that Aflac sells provide payments that can be used for extra medical expenses associated with the disease, such as private nursing costs, private rooms, travel and family lodging costs, as well as lost income. (For the record, hospital stays for cancer treatment tend to be much longer in Japan.) These costs can be substantial.

    #japon #assurance #santé #peur :

    where there [is] fear there [is] an opportunity to charge premiums high enough to make money.

  • #Malaria vaccine: Hopes rise for 2015 target after successful trials | Society | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/oct/08/malaria-vaccine-trial-children-babies

    A vaccine against malaria could be introduced in the world’s worst-hit countries in 2015, after the latest trial of a treatment produced by Britain’s biggest drug company reduced the number of cases of the disease experienced by babies.

    The results of trials published on Tuesday in Durban, South Africa, showed that the RTS,S vaccine developed by GlaxoSmithKline nearly halved the cases of malaria experienced by children aged between five and seven months and cut the number of cases in babies aged 6 to 12 weeks by a quarter.

    The treatment’s protection lasted for 18 months, although it waned slightly over time, and while that is not the sort of efficacy that parents in Europe or the US are used to getting in the vaccines given to their children, the malaria vaccine would make a significant difference to the outlook for those in areas where the tropical disease is rife.

    Every year, around 660,000 people die from malaria, most of them small children under the age of five. There are about 219m cases of the disease a year worldwide, and children who survive the serious illness can suffer damage to their health and development in their lifetime afterwards.

    #santé #vaccin #pharma

  • 4 decades after war ended, Agent Orange still ravaging Vietnamese | McClatchy
    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/07/22/197318/4-decades-after-war-ended-agent.html

    To this day, dioxin continues to poison the land and the people. The United States has never accepted responsibility for these victims – it denies that Agent Orange is responsible for diseases among Vietnamese that are accepted as Agent Orange-caused among American veterans – and it’s unclear when this chain of misery will end.

    ...

    U.S. aid for these people so far has amounted to a pittance. According to the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi, only $11 million of the $61.4 million that Congress has allocated since 2007 – a year after then-President George W. Bush pledged to help clean up contaminated areas – has been earmarked for public health programs in Vietnam.

    U.S. officials caution that the money is to help people with disabilities “regardless of cause,” and isn’t specifically for Agent Orange victims. This semantic sleight of hand outrages many American veterans of the war, who say the United States has a moral obligation to help Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange, just as sick and dying U.S. veterans have received government help for the last two decades.

    “There’s a hypocrisy there,” says Chuck Searcy, who served in Vietnam as an intelligence analyst during the war and has lived in Hanoi since 1998, heading up a project to clear battlefields of unexploded ordnance, which also continues to kill and maim Vietnamese. “It’s a glaring disconnect, and it’s embarrassing because the whole world can see it.”

    ...

    Hoping to emulate a case that resulted in a 1984 settlement requiring Dow Chemical, the Monsanto Corp. and other Agent Orange manufacturers to pay $197 million in damages to sick U.S. veterans, a group of Vietnamese victims sued in 2004, only to have the same federal judge dismiss their case a year later, saying the companies were immune because they were following government orders. The Supreme Court declined to hear the case in 2009.

    ...

    • Obama interpelle le président vietnamien sur les libertés- http://www.7sur7.be/7s7/fr/2864/Dossier-Obama/article/detail/1675436/2013/07/25/Obama-interpelle-le-president-vietnamien-sur-les-libertes.dhtml

      Le président des Etats-Unis Barack Obama a interpellé jeudi son homologue vietnamien Truong Tan Sang au sujet du respect des libertés de culte et d’expression, en le recevant à la Maison Blanche.

      ...

      M. Obama a aussi fait allusion à la guerre du Vietnam, plus de 50 ans après l’arrivée des premiers « conseillers » américains dans l’ancienne colonie française, et 38 ans après la chute de Saïgon.

      « Nous avons à l’esprit l’histoire très complexe que partagent les Etats-Unis et le Vietnam, mais peu à peu, nous avons été capables d’établir un respect et une confiance mutuels », a affirmé le dirigeant américain, en parlant de « partenariat d’ampleur entre les deux pays ».

      Alors que le Vietnam participe aux négociations sur le « Partenariat transpacifique » (TPP), vaste projet de libre-échange soutenu par les Etats-Unis, M. Obama a répété son ambition de voir cet accord « conclu d’ici à la fin de l’année, car nous savons qu’il peut créer des emplois et faire croître les investissements dans toute la région et nos deux pays ».

  • The main death reason in Latvia are heart and blood vessels’ diseases

    In 55% of cases the cause of death in Latvia are heart and blood vessel’s diseases. Today, July 15, in cabinet committee government will discuss plan for 2013-2015 about health improvement regarding these diseases.
    Level of cases when this has been cause of death is two times higher than average in EU. Average in EU is 222, while in Latvia it is 478, but in Lithuania - 495. Government will discuss also issues regarding smoking as this is one of the reasons for heart diseases.

    Galvenais nāves cēlonis Latvijā ir sirds un asinsvadu slimības - DELFI
    http://www.delfi.lv/news/national/politics/galvenais-naves-celonis-latvija-ir-sirds-un-asinsvadu-slimibas.d?id=43481023

    Sirds un asinsvadu slimības joprojām ir galvenais nāves iemesls Latvijā - 55% gadījumu no visiem mirušajiem, atsaucoties uz statistikas datiem, sacīts Veselības ministrijas sagatavotajā Sirds un asinsvadu veselības uzlabošanas rīcības plānā 2013.-2015.gadam, kuru pirmdien, 15.jūlijā, skatīs Ministru kabineta komitejā (MKK).
    Plāns izstrādāts atbilstoši Sabiedrības veselības pamatnostādnēs 2011.-2017.gadam noteiktajam apakšmērķim - samazināt saslimstību un mirstību no neinfekciju slimībām. Tā mērķis ir samazināt mirstību no sirds un asinsvadu slimībām, mazinot riska faktoru negatīvo ietekmi uz veselību.

    #Latvia #Health #heart_diseases

  • The Emperor of All Maladies : A Biography of Cancer (2010) - Siddhartha Mukherjee

    Siddhartha Mukherjee (born 1970) is an Indian-born American physician, scientist and author. This book won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction and the Guardian Prize

    Quelques notes sur ce #livre, qui est à mon avis plus une #histoire de la recherche sur le cancer qu’une “biographie du cancer”.

    – p. 48. Le médecin romain Claude Galien (d’origine grecque), en 160, écrivait que le cancer provenait de l’accumulation d’une des quatre humeurs, la bile noire ; dépression et cancer étaient ainsi reliés de façon intrinsèque (cf. "Mars" de Fritz Zorn).

    Only one other disease, replete with metaphors, would be attributed to an excess of this oily, viscous humor: depression. Indeed, melancholia, the medieval name for “depression,” would draw its name from the Greek melas, “black,” and khole, “bile.” Depression and cancer, the psychic and physical diseases of black bile, were thus intrinsically intertwined.) Galen proposed that cancer was “trapped” black bile—static bile unable to escape from a site and thus congealed into a matted mass.

    – p. 86 ; 1910. Paul Ehrlich montre que la chimie industrielle va permettre de trouver des médicaments :

    A gigantic factory, funded by Hoechst Chemical Works, was already being built to manufacture it for commercial use.
    Ehrlich’s successes with Trypan Red and compound 606 (which he named Salvarsan, from the word salvation) proved that diseases were just pathological locks waiting to be picked by the right molecules. The line of potentially curable illnesses now stretched endlessly before him. Ehrlich called his drugs “magic bullets” — bullets for their capacity to kill and magic for their specificity. It was a phrase with an ancient, alchemic ring that would sound insistently through the future of oncology.

    – p. 99 ; 1948, grâce à Sidney Farber et Mary Lasker (la mère de toutes les “ligues contre le cancer”), le cancer devient une cause « médiatique » :

    The campaign against cancer, Farber learned, was much like a political campaign: it needed icons, mascots, images, slogans—the strategies of advertising as much as the tools of science. For any illness to rise to political prominence, it needed to be marketed, just as a political campaign needed marketing. A disease needed to be transformed politically before it could be transformed scientifically

    – p. 119 ; l’aboutissement du projet Manhattan transforme la manière de penser la recherche ; le modèle de Vannevar Bush (donner la liberté aux chercheurs de se consacrer à la recherche fondamentale) semble subitement dépassé :

    On August 7, 1945, the morning after the Hiroshima bombing, the New York Times gushed about the extraordinary success of the project: “University professors who are opposed to organizing, planning and directing research after the manner of industrial laboratories . . . have something to think about now. A most important piece of research was conducted on behalf of the Army in precisely the means adopted in industrial laboratories. End result: an invention was given to the world in three years, which it would have taken perhaps half-a-century to develop if we had to rely on prima-donna research scientists who work alone. . . . A problem was stated, it was solved by teamwork, by planning, by competent direction, and not by the mere desire to satisfy curiosity.”
    The congratulatory tone of that editorial captured a general sentiment about science that had swept through the nation.

    (Bien entendu c’est un leurre, car l’application technologique n’a pu fonctionner que sur une base scientifique fondamentale non dirigée.)

    – p. 130 ; 1995 : l’invention des premiers essais cliniques en cancéro, avec l’implication des médecins cliniciens

    As new drugs, combinations, and trials proliferated, [Gordon] Zubrod worried that institutions would be caught at cross-purposes, squabbling over patients and protocols when they should really be battling cancer. Burchenal in New York, Farber in Boston, James Holland at Roswell Park, and the two Emils at the NCI were all chomping at the bit to launch clinical trials. And since ALL was a rare disease, every patient was a precious resource for a leukemia trial. To avert conflicts, Zubrod proposed that a “consortium” of researchers be created to share patients, trials, data, and knowledge.
    The proposal changed the field. “Zubrod’s cooperative group model galvanized cancer medicine,” Robert Mayer (who would later become the chair of one of these groups) recalls. “For the first time, an academic oncologist felt as if he had a community. The cancer doctor was not the outcast anymore, not the man who prescribed poisons from some underground chamber in the hospital.” The first group meeting, chaired by Farber, was a resounding success. The researchers agreed to proceed with a series of common trials, called protocols, as soon as possible.
    Zubrod next set about organizing the process by which trials could be run. Cancer trials, he argued, had thus far been embarrassingly chaotic and disorganized. Oncologists needed to emulate the best trials in medicine.

    – p. 135 ; sur l’expression « war on cancer », cette citation :

    . . . But I do subscribe to the view that words have very powerful texts and subtexts. “War” has truly a unique status, “war” has a very special meaning. It means putting young men and women in situations where they might get killed or grievously wounded. It’s inappropriate to retain that metaphor for a scholarly activity in these times of actual war. The NIH is a community of scholars focused on generating knowledge to improve the public health. That’s a great activity. That’s not a war.
    —Samuel Broder, NCI director

    – p. 182 comment une maladie capture l’imagination en fonction des préoccupations de la société :

    AIDS loomed so large on the 1980s in part because this was a generation inherently haunted by its sexuality and freedom; SARS set off a panic about global spread and contagion at a time when globalism and social contagion were issues simmering nervously in the West. Every era casts illness in its own image. Society, like the ultimate psychosomatic patient, matches its medical afflictions to its psychological crises; when a disease touches such a visceral chord, it is often because that chord is already resonating.
    So it was with cancer. As the writer and philosopher Renata Salecl described it, “A radical change happened to the perception of the object of horror” in the 1970s, a progression from the external to the internal. In the 1950s, in the throes of the Cold War, Americans were preoccupied with the fear of annihilation from the outside: from bombs and warheads, from poisoned water reservoirs, communist armies, and invaders from outer space. The threat to society was perceived as external. Horror movies—the thermometers of anxiety in popular culture—featured alien invasions, parasitic occupations of the brain, and body snatching: It Came from Outer Space or The Man from Planet X.
    But by the early 1970s, the locus of anxiety—the “object of horror,” as Salecl describes it—had dramatically shifted from the outside to the inside. The rot, the horror—the biological decay and its concomitant spiritual decay—was now relocated within the corpus of society and, by extension, within the body of man. American society was still threatened, but this time, the threat came from inside. The names of horror films reflected the switch: The Exorcist; They Came from Within.
    Cancer epitomized this internal horror.

    – p. 198 ; à une période s’est développé ce qu’on appelait la « mastectomie radicale » de Halsted, une ablation non seulement du sein mais remontant le plus haut possible, jusqu’à la clavicule… l’idée qui avait amené à ce dogme était que, comme certaines patientes rechutaient ne guérissaient pas après une ablation, c’est qu’elle n’avait pas été suffisamment large ; aucune étude statistique n’avait démontré que cette boucherie apportait la moindre amélioration de la survie. En 1953, le chirurgien George Barney Crile se dit qu’il faut peut-être faire une analyse #statistique pour voir si réellement c’est efficace. Il se heurte alors au conservatisme de l’institution :

    No breast cancer trial, for instance, could have proceeded without the explicit blessing and participation of larger-than-life surgeons such as Haagensen and Urban. Yet these surgeons, all enraptured intellectual descendants of Halsted, were the least likely to sponsor a trial that might dispute the theory that they had so passionately advocated for decades. When critics wondered whether Haagensen had been biased in his evaluation by selecting only his best cases, he challenged surgeons to replicate his astounding success using their own alternative methods: “Go thou and do likewise.”
    Thus even Crile—a full forty years after Keynes’s discovery—couldn’t run a trial to dispute Halsted’s mastectomy. The hierarchical practice of medicine, its internal culture, its rituals of practice (“The Gospel[s] of the Surgical Profession,” as Crile mockingly called it), were ideally arranged to resist change and to perpetuate orthodoxy. Crile found himself pitted against his own department, against friends and colleagues. The very doctors that he would need to recruit to run such a trial were fervently, often viciously, opposed to it. “Power,” in the colloquial sense of the word, thus collided with “power” in the statistical sense. The surgeons who had so painstakingly created the world of radical surgery had absolutely no incentive to revolutionize it.
    It took a Philadelphia surgeon named Bernard Fisher to cut through that knot of surgical tradition.

    – p. 199 fin des années 1960 ; le #féminisme permet enfin pour la première fois au patient de s’ingérer dans la politique de santé :

    In Texas, Jane Roe (a pseudonym) sued the state for blocking her ability to abort her fetus at a medical clinic—launching the Roe v. Wade case on abortion and highlighting the complex nexus between the state, medical authority, and women’s bodies. Political feminism, in short, was birthing medical feminism—and the fact that one of the most common and most disfiguring operations performed on women’s bodies had never been formally tested in a trial stood out as even more starkly disturbing to a new generation of women. “Refuse to submit to a radical mastectomy,” Crile exhorted his patients in 1973.
    And refuse they did. Rachel Carson, the author of Silent Spring and a close friend of Crile’s, refused a radical mastectomy (in retrospect, she was right: her cancer had already spread to her bones and radical surgery would have been pointless). Betty Rollin and Rose Kushner also refused and soon joined Carson in challenging radical surgeons. Rollin and Kushner—both marvelous writers: provocative, down-to-earth, no-nonsense, witty—were particularly adept at challenging the bloated orthodoxy of surgery. They flooded newspapers and magazines with editorials and letters and appeared (often uninvited) at medical and surgical conferences, where they fearlessly heckled surgeons about their data and the fact that the radical mastectomy had never been put to a test.

    (…)

    “The clinician, no matter how venerable, must accept the fact that experience, voluminous as it might be, cannot be employed as a sensitive indicator of scientific validity,” [Bernard] Fisher wrote in an article. He was willing to have faith in divine wisdom, but not in Halsted as divine wisdom. “In God we trust,” he brusquely told a journalist. “All others [must] have data.

    (…)

    Between 1891 and 1981, in the nearly one hundred years of the radical mastectomy, an estimated five hundred thousand women underwent the procedure to “extirpate” cancer.

    – p. 204 ; l’arrivée du cisplatine, use molécule décrite en 1890, et testée par hasard sur le cancer en 1965 : "In 1973, the survival rate from metastatic testes cancer was less than 5 percent." Quelques années plus tard, les résultats sont miraculeux.

    – p. 270 ; chapitre hallucinant sur les fabricants de #tabac ; le combat judiciaire est passionnant, avec notamment :

    The tobacco industry had all but declared absolute victory: “Plaintiff attorneys can read the writing on the wall,” one report crowed, “they have no case.”
    Edell, however, refused to read any writing on any walls. He acknowledged openly that Rose Cipollone was aware of the risks of smoking. Yes, she had read the warning labels on cigarettes and the numerous magazine articles cut out so painstakingly by Tony Cipollone. Yet, unable to harness her habit, she had remained addicted. Cipollone was far from innocent, Edell conceded. But what mattered was not how much Rose Cipollone knew about tobacco risks; what mattered was what cigarette makers knew, and how much of the cancer risk they had revealed to consumers such as Rose.
    The argument took the tobacco companies by surprise. Edell’s insistence that he needed to know what cigarette makers knew about smoking risks allowed him to ask the courts for unprecedented access to the internal files of Philip Morris, Liggett, and Lorillard. Armed with powerful legal injunctions to investigate these private files, Edell unearthed a saga of epic perversity. Many of the cigarette makers had not only known about the cancer risks of tobacco and the potent addictive properties of nicotine, but had also actively tried to quash internal research that proved it. Document after document revealed frantic struggles within the industry to conceal risks, often leaving even its own employees feeling morally queasy.

    – p. 275 ;

    It is difficult for me to convey the range and depth of devastation that I witnessed in the cancer wards that could be directly attributed to cigarette smoking. (…) It remains an astonishing, disturbing fact that in America—a nation where nearly every new drug is subjected to rigorous scrutiny as a potential carcinogen, and even the bare hint of a substance’s link to cancer ignites a firestorm of public hysteria and media anxiety—one of the most potent and common carcinogens known to humans can be freely bought and sold at every corner store for a few dollars.

    – p. 316, années 1980 ; l’arrivée du sida et de malades qui prennent en mains la connaissance scientifique et parlent sur un pied d’égalité avec les médecins

    – p. 328, décembre 1999 : l’affaire Werner Bezwoda ; depuis les années 1980 la mode est à l’autogreffe de moelle osseuse. Ce chirurgien sud-africain, qui opère à Johannesburg, présente à chaque colloque des résultats fantastiques. L’industrie de transplantation engendrée par ces résultats engouffre 4 milliards de dollars. Mais des gens commencent à douter car leurs résultats ne sont pas si probants. Des enquêteurs sont envoyés pour vérifier — Bezwoda, qui n’opérait pratiquement que des femmes noires pauvres et illettrées, avait falsifié ses essais.

    – p. 358, on croise Peter Duesberg, et ses recherches sur le Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). (Il deviendra plus tard l’inspirateur des négationnistes du lien entre VIH et sida.)

    – p. 378, portrait de Thad Dryja, un collectionneur obsessionnel de tumeurs, qui va jusqu’à appeler les patients chez eux pour savoir s’ils ont d’autres membres de la famille touchés par le rétinoblastome, et n’hésite pas à prendre l’avion pour aller récupérer les tumeurs. Cela lui permettra de mettre en route toute la recherche sur la génétique du cancer.

    – p. 388-389, une description minutieuse de la manière dont les mutations s’accumulent, conduisant progressivement au cancer. (“Let us begin with a normal cell…”)

    – p. 418 ; l’histoire de l’herceptine chez Genentech, la recherche privée, les #brevets, le hiatus entre la recherche fondamentale et appliquée. Et là aussi l’arrivée des patients-militants, notamment Barbara Bradfield.

    – p. 436 ; l’invention du Gleevec (Glivec) chez Ciba-Geigy (aujourd’hui Novartis), là encore, l’industriel ne voit pas l’intérêt de développer le médicament (les essais lui coûtant 100 M$), et le chercheur, Peter Drucker, doit se battre pour qu’il existe. On connaît la suite (hello l’Inde).

    #cancer #recherche #santé #militer

  • Barbara Brenner, Breast #Cancer Iconoclast, Dies at 61 - NYTimes
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/21/us/barbara-brenner-breast-cancer-iconoclast-dies-at-61.html

    Ms. Brenner championed causes for most of her adult life, protesting the Vietnam War as a college student and working on women’s rights, civil rights and employment discrimination as a lawyer. She became Breast Cancer Action’s first executive director in 1995, two years after undergoing treatment for the disease and a year before it recurred.

    Ms. Brenner led the group until 2010, when illness forced her to retire. During the 15 years of her leadership, the group increased its membership to 50,000 from 3,500 and intensified its focus on demanding research into the causes of breast cancer, particularly links to #environmental pollutants like chemicals in food and the water supply, an area of research rife with unreliable data.

    Ms. Brenner was among the first to question what she called the “#pinkwashing” of America: the proliferation of pink ribbons and products carrying labels stating that part of the purchase price would go to breast cancer research.
    (...)

    [Her partner] Ms. Lampert said, “I always told her that I would make sure her obituary said she died after a long battle with the breast cancer industry.”

    #santé #pharma #chimie #pollution #recherche #charity_business

    son blog: http://barbarabrenner.net

  • Taliban renounces war on anti-polio workers - Telegraph
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/10053981/Taliban-renounces-war-on-anti-polio-workers.html

    in a sudden U-turn the Taliban leadership issued a statement offering its support for polio eradication campaigns as long as foreigners were not involved and that all volunteers respected local Islamic culture.
    "According to the latest international medicine science, the polio disease can only be cured by preventive measures ie the anti-polio drops and the vaccination of children against this disease.
    “The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan supports and lends a hand to all those programs which works for the health care of the helpless people of our country,” said a stament issued by the ’Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan’.
    But it warned the World Health Organisation and Unicef to employ only “unbiased people” in a campaign “harmonised with the regional conditions, Islamic values and local cultural traditions.”

    #polio #vaccination #afghanistan #santé

  • AFP: Breast implants may delay cancer diagnosis: study
    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jDU7n1mfNmybxLtuxcQqdFv3IXZQ

    Breast implants may delay cancer diagnosis in women, said a study Wednesday that urged a thorough probe into the potential health risks of this type of cosmetic surgery.
    In a review of 12 earlier studies of breast cancer patients, a team of epidemiologists from Canada found that women with implants had a 26 percent higher risk of being diagnosed at a later stage of the disease.
    This was possibly because implants cast shadows on mammograms, blocking the view of breast tissue.

    #cancer #santé #chirurgie_esthétique

  • Heavy use of herbicide Roundup linked to health dangers-U.S. study | Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/25/roundup-health-study-idUSL2N0DC22F20130425

    Heavy use of the world’s most popular herbicide, Roundup, could be linked to a range of health problems and diseases, including Parkinson’s, infertility and cancers, according to a new study.

    The peer-reviewed report, published last week in the scientific journal Entropy, said evidence indicates that residues of “glyphosate,” the chief ingredient in Roundup weed killer, which is sprayed over millions of acres of crops, has been found in food.

    Those residues enhance the damaging effects of other food-borne chemical residues and toxins in the environment to disrupt normal body functions and induce disease, according to the report, authored by Stephanie Seneff, a research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Anthony Samsel, a retired science consultant from Arthur D. Little, Inc. Samsel is a former private environmental government contractor as well as a member of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

    “Negative impact on the body is insidious and manifests slowly over time as inflammation damages cellular systems throughout the body,” the study says.

    We “have hit upon something very important that needs to be taken seriously and further investigated,” Seneff said.

    Environmentalists, consumer groups and plant scientists from several countries have warned that heavy use of glyphosate is causing problems for plants, people and animals.

    The EPA [Environmental Protection Agency] is conducting a standard registration review of glyphosate and has set a deadline of 2015 for determining if glyphosate use should be limited.

    Sinon une autre étude (mais non publiée semble-t-il*) corroborerait la présence de glyphosate :

    Une nouvelle étude américaine juge le maïs OGM toxique - Enviro2B | Enviro2B
    http://www.enviro2b.com/2013/04/18/une-nouvelle-etude-americaine-juge-le-mais-ogm-toxique

    Une nouvelle étude menée par la société américaine Profit Pro, pourrait relancer le débat autour du maïs génétiquement modifié. Dans un rapport, « 2012 Corn Comparison », dont les conclusions ont été reprises sur le site russe Rt.com, les auteurs ont en effet constaté que ce type de maïs contiendraient des éléments, absents de la plante au naturel, et potentiellement toxiques pour l’homme.

    * http://www.profitproag.com

    The study “2012 Nutritional Analysis – Comparison of GMO Corn versus Non-GMO Corn” was an analysis of corn itself and not the soil. The analysis was conducted by an independent, outsourced, major food company at the request of one of our growers, and the results were then provided to that grower, who, in turn, made available a copy of the analysis to ProfitPro. The food company purchased the corn from the grower at a substantial premium over market because of the quality of his non-GMO corn.

    This information was intended for our customers only.
    ProfitPro did not give permission for any other web site to use or publish the study.
    Additional side-by-side studies will be conducted this coming year.

    #Monsanto #Roundup #OGM #glyphosate