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by sekm
5072 days ago
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The first line of this article jolted me backwards. At Universities in New Zealand, any type of experiment involving human participants (even just talking to them) requires passing through an exceptional amount of ethics-committee red tape. I believe the ethics were derived after the experiments from WW2 on humans. Regardless of whether or not these patients agreed, it still sounds ridiculously unethical. Does anyone know of any animal research using the same techniques? |
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My opinion: GBM is a death sentence. It claims some of the worst survival statistics of any cancer.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22215883
Looking at that review you can see that median survival is 7.6mo with the 2yr survival rate hovering around 9%.
I'm not familiar with the protocol they were approved for or what their alleged deviations from the protocol were but, given the gravity of the situation, some experimenting is definitely in order. The standard of care is a barely a hair better than doing nothing at all.