Guest viewing limit reached
  • You have reached the maximum number of guest views allowed
  • Please register below to remove this limitation

Untried cancer drug bought on web

yeahright

Well-known member
Untried cancer drug bought on web

Patients are buying an experimental cancer drug over the internet, it has been reported.

The drug, called DCA, has been shown to shrink tumours in rats but tests on humans are years away.

However Nature magazine reports some terminally ill patients are taking the drug because they do not want to wait for the research.

UK cancer experts warned patients there was no evidence DCA was beneficial, and said it could cause harm.

Rat research


DCA, or dichloroacetate, is a small molecule that blocks an enzyme in mitochondria - which generate energy in cells and also control cell suicide.

Dr Evangelos Michelakis, of the University of Alberta in Canada, who has been investigating the drug, found the cancer cells turned off the suicide switch.

Tests he carried out on rats showed DCA can reignite the switch, and prompt the cells to die.

Tumours shrank by around 75% within three weeks.

Other work has shown DCA can kill human cancer cells in the lab, but no patients have actually been given the drug to treat their cancer.

Nature suggests up to 200 people around the world have bought the drug over the web.

But Dr Michelakis and others are concerned.

He said that the patients' use of the drug could undermine efforts to carry out a controlled trial if harmful side effects emerged and the drug earns a bad reputation.

"It's destroying efforts to do this right. Any way you look at this, it's a negative development."

The US Food and Drug Administration is investigating the web purchasing of DCA.

Experts say terminally ill patients want to try whatever is available, because they feel they have nothing to lose.

But Professor John Toy, medical director of Cancer Research UK,said he "strongly advised" patients not to buy DCA.

"DCA has not been tested for this purpose. DCA might not be helpful and, indeed, might be harmful when given to cancer patients."

He added: "It is understandable that people with cancer will want to try almost anything to treat their disease.

"However, there is no evidence to support the use of DCA for treating cancer. Patients would be wise to continue consulting their specialist for advice."

Story from BBC NEWS:
Invalid Link Removed

Published: 2007/03/29 10:54:33 GMT
 
"It's destroying efforts to do this right. Any way you look at this, it's a negative development."

I understand his concern for the big picture, but there is no "any way you look at this" here. If I was facing terminal cancer, then the chance to buy black market experimental drugs that might save me would probably look like a pretty positive development.
 
Last edited:
i believe that patients considered to be terminally ill should abosulutely have the option of buying experimental drugs available to them. it is really a no brainer.

If all is all is lost and you are going to die, why in the great blue **** shouldnt you be able to try the experimental drug? It makes absolutely 0 sense whatsoever.

A bunch of puffed up politicians and bureacrats wouldnt really activate my give a damn o meter if i thought the drug might help me. who are they to say no? im surprised we havent been seeing much, much more of this.
 
I think terminally ill patients should be allowed to get blank scripts with there name and the doctors signiture on it.
 
I suspect that Professor John would be whistling a different tune if he were facing terminal cancer and had this option available.
 
Back
Top