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Big Breakthrough in Fight Against Cancer


Johnson and Johnson will partner with Massachusetts General Hospital to develop and market a blood test that could find a single cancer cell circulating in a person’s blood, the company said Monday.

Researchers hope the test will be used by oncologists as a diagnostic tool aimed at discovering as early as possible if a cancer has spread, as well as by researchers in coming up with new drug therapies.

Veridex, a Johnson and Johnson company, announced the partnership in a statement, saying it involves Ortho Biotech Oncology Research and Development, a unit of Johnson and Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development.

“This new technology has the potential to facilitate an easy-to-administer, non-invasive blood test that would allow us to count tumor cells, and to characterize the biology of the cells,” said Robert McCormack, Veridex’s head of technology innovation and strategy. “Harnessing the information contained in these cells in an in vitro clinical setting could enable tools to help select treatment and monitor how patients are responding.”

Veridex launched the first commercial test using CTC, or circulating tumor cell technology, in 2004, the company said. It describes circulating tumor cells as cancer cells that have detached from a tumor and are found at very low levels in the bloodstream. Capturing and counting the number of those cells can provide information to patients and doctors about prognoses with certain types of metastatic cancers, the statement said.

“The value of capturing and counting CTCs is evolving as more research data is gathered about the utility of these markers in monitoring disease progression and potentially guiding personalized cancer therapy,” the Veridex statement said.

“The challenging goal of sorting extremely rare circulating tumor cells from blood requires continuous technological, biological and clinical innovation to fully explore the utility of these precious cells in clinical oncology,” said Mehmet Toner, director of the BioMicroElectroMechanical Systems Resource Center in Massachusetts General’s Center for Engineering in Medicine. “We have developed and continue to develop a broad range of technologies that are evolving what we know about cancer and cancer care.”

(Source: CNN)



8 Responses

  1. More baloney from the pharmaceutical gangsters.

    Reasearch has demonstrated that chemotherapy is useless for most cancers. Only chilhood leukemia and some lymphomas respond, somewhat.

    The U.S. Government protects the huge cancer industry by making all other treatments illegal, even if they are proven effective in many countries around the world.

    People in this country are being sacrificed on the altar of profits.

  2. The question if the FDA will approve this. Definitely i agree with deepthinker that this is a business. There is a frum young lady who works for Merk and when we once asked about a cure she agreed that the industry will not allow a cure to be announced. Think of all the people who would be out of business if the cure would be out. Imagine a sign in front of Sloan Kettering, saying CLOSED!
    And to Homeless, remember “where there is life, there is hope”.

  3. There are many break throughs being made each day. There are drugs developed that target cancer cells .They have to be approved as they are going throgh many rounds of vigirous testing and trials before they can be officially released to the public. I actually was working with one…there is plenty of hope.

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