Frustrated by the constraints of Earth, a team of California scientists took tumor research to space—and may have discovered a ‘kill switch’ for cancer::With the help of Axiom 3 astronauts on the International Space Station, a cancer “kill switch” drug may make it to clinical trials before year’s end.

  • daddyjones
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    1511 months ago

    I feel like we’re told about some sort of “kill switch” or silver bullet for cancer every couple of years. Hopefully one of these days it’ll actually beat fruit. Maybe even this time?

  • Echo Dot
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    1311 months ago

    Yeah stupid Earth. Getting in the way of cancer research like it does.

    Seriously we’ve been told that they found a cure for cancer about 500 times now and they never have actually found a cure.

    • @Noodle07@lemmy.world
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      611 months ago

      They have though, there’s tons of different cancers and now we have tons of different ways to treat each of them

      • Echo Dot
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        711 months ago

        Yeah but no actual ultimate cure. These articles seem to imply they have found the bee all an end-all cure for cancer. Which would be great if they found it I just doubt it because of all the historical situations where that has not been the case, and it is ultimately turned out that the so called journalists, not the same scientists, have been somewhat creative with the truth.

        They have actually found a cure for cancer I would like the scientists to announce the discovery.

  • @j4k3@lemmy.world
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    1211 months ago

    Sounds about right, the cure just costs a treatment and trip to space /s

    “Does my MediCal cover Falcon 9?” …

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    411 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Axiom 3 was slated for splashdown Saturday but has been delayed until Tuesday, at the earliest, due to weather, according to SpaceX, which manufactured the Crew Dragon spacecraft used for the mission.

    It wasn’t the first time the team—led by Dr. Catriona H.M. Jamieson, a hematologist and medical professor at the college, as well as the director of its Sanford Stem Cell Institute—sent such samples into space.

    It previously launched stem cells on multiple Space X flights and noticed that pre-leukemic changes occurred, unseen during the same timeframe in controls on the ground.

    On previous missions, her team noticed that mini tumors sent to space activated the gene before tripling in size in just 10 days, a much faster rate of growth than seen on the ground.

    On the last Axiom mission, Jamieson’s team sent up mini tumors treated with two types of anti-cancer medications that block ADAR1 in different ways.

    Enthused by the results, Jamieson’s team began work on an experimental drug called rebecsinib that blocks ADAR1 activation in a different way—by preventing it from spawning malignant proteins.


    The original article contains 559 words, the summary contains 179 words. Saved 68%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    111 months ago

    Every step I make…there it is, just stoping my stepping power, the earth. Can’t we just kick down and not have some big ass planet stop us?