Philip Morris
Elusive Quest Cancer Research Drive, Begun with Fanfare, Hits Disllusionment Con Gress, Public Ask What Big Outlay Has Bought; Is It A Family of Diseases? Gains in Some Areas Noted
Fields
- Author
- Jaroslovsky, R.
- Area
- CENTRAL FILES/DATABASE CORRESPONDENCE
- Type
- NEWS, NEWSPAPER ARTICLE
- Site
- R100
- Request
- Stmn/R1-102
- Named Organization
- Brown Univ
- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- NCI, Natl Cancer Inst
- Rand
- Stanford Univ
- American Cancer Society
- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
- Named Person
- Carter
- Cooper, T.
- Kennedy, D.
- Mcgoven, G.
- Nixon
- Nobel
- Rettig, R.
- Rogers, P.
- Upton, A.
- Cooper, T.
- Document File
- 1000795119/1000795292/C81 04311 American Cancer Society
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Wall Street Journal
- Master ID
- 1000795121/5292
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- Characteristic
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- qnv48e00
Document Images
Eluslz'e QuPSt
Cancer R.esearch Drive,
Begun .'With Faniare,
Hits Disillusioiiment
Congress; Public, Ask Mnt
Big Outlay Has Bought;,
Is It a Fami:y of Diseaes?
Ga.irls in Solne: Areas Noted
' . ByRrCH JAROsLovsKY~ ..
$ttIJJ. R-p-l~ Of TH S.~R--L STRE E.T]O ORUA L
ti{'.1SHINGTO*I - Donald Kennedy, the
U.S. Food and DrugCom.missoner, calls the
gpvernment's war on cancer "a medical
Vietnam." Vast amounts of money and ef-
fort are pumped into the battle, he says, yet
victory seems no closer.
Seven years and S5 billian ago. Reslt!enG
Nixon,and Congress began an allbut drive
to find a cure for the natioa's second-bigg-est
Y.t;ler. Some le; slators spoke of solving the
cancer riddlefn ti me . forr thee nation's 2COt}t
bir thday in 19'6. The President called the ef.
fort "our great crusadz "
Today. ttioug5I a.cancer cure. Ls'still jtzst'ahopet
Indeed, somerese:archers say the
more thev learn about'cancer, the:less likely
or imminent a single cure.seems:
"We have been, simohstic, I'feek In,outr
notions about cancer," says Dr. Arthur Up-
Thiss is lhv../irst oJ_nco crttdes.cn
cancer researehk
ton, directorr of the National Cv^tcer. Insa- (
tute..."I think were.wron, to.expect a.c:re
to come soon, in tt:e toreseeaole h:ture." In-
stead of a quick victory n t e cancer azs,
he_ suggests, researchers may have to sett.'e '
for a series of smalle; battla'ce;d suecesses. I
Such a conclusioniposes political as well
as medical problems 'or scie :=-s. For the '
war on,cancer is sta.::.^gta cayt`.e pnce.forr theextrasagant c: aims cf.4.e past. Fuh-
Gc disenchantment 'a,t1 ;::e slo-R s.-td ccsCy ,
effort is growing..And Congre-ss, long a'aas-:a bas-
tion of supportI and dbl:ars;in-'
creasihY signs of dCubt a.nd i.^.'utience.
w
1' /I ~~ue1,~d1.fII 1 0~~C f t,l~Cr a<< j i"I
"The Honeymoon Is Over"
Despite progress in some areas, "we
haven't bought very much" tn,seven years I
of researcD;. Sen. Geore: \icGorerncom- plains. The South Da,cota De.mccrat recently
conducted hearings at whtcb the National
Cancer Institute s band:i: g, of the cancer,
campaign was cash -aed- "The car,cer-re-
searcti establishment dog,~edly continues t(>
'
seek an elusive cancer cure and concomi-
tant'Nobel Prize" while slipts.g importantt
areas sueh as cancer-preven_'on research,
Sen. McGovern contends. - ' .
Dr, Upton disnutes the Senator's charges.
But he acknowledges that such complaints
are symptoms of a growing nnease:about
the cancer effort. "It's evidentto me that
the attitude is chane.hg,"" he says. '"The
honeymo n is.over."
At the root of this disillusionment Is the
huge buiid'up thanthe cancertighrreceived
In the early 1910s: Bact then, pnLticiansand
powerful interest groups like the American
Cancer Society concluded that the time was
right for tY'major campaign making use of
researchers' increasing knowledge about the
nature of the disease. A congressionaflyy
sponsored adUisory; committee declared, "A
national'program for the conquest'of cancer
Is essential if we are to Iexp:.loit effectivelye the:great'opportunities which are presented
as a result of recent advances."
Backed by Presideat Nixon and key /egis-
tators like Democratic Sen.. Edw'ard1 . Ken-
nedyy of Massactiusetts thee cancer war wass
launched amid! much fantare in 1971i That
year'Stiaconal Cancerlnstitutebude tµas
increased toIS3.'v)million from Moim,illion;,
the fiscal, 19;9 budget tops $910 rnrlDon,,The
institute has spent t:aice as:mu:ch money in
the past seven years than in its entire pre-.
vious 3i-year histary:,
An Elusii.'e: Cure
-
Yet a cure-ttt'e "magic btdlet," some
people calls it-has eluded researchers.. The
cancer war "per pet :ally appears- on the
verge:" of victory, t.ti FDA's Mr. Kennedy
says but victory is seemir:gly aiways jtist ''
beyond' re..rh.
The biggest reason for that frustration II,
may lie inithe:very nature of cancer. ?dany ~
researchers have come to regard it nocas a I
s6ng!e illness but as a oomplex family of di+-
seasvs with many different'causes, including
environmeatal ones:. While all cancers are
characterized by, unchecked grewth of celis
in the body, the disease can have very dif-
ferent manifestations: Scientists wcnder
whether the body processes leading to, say,
leukemia (cancerof t.heblocd cells) are the
same ones, leading to, for example, breast
cancer., . I
On the key question of whether cancer is
a siagte disease, most governmert'o`SCalic
and other sr.lentists seem to side with the
FDA's Mr. Kennedy, who is a scientist!and
former head of Stanford' University's hu-
man-biology program He says there doesn't
seem to be "a single formula" for ca.cer,
and so there mightn't be a single cure,
either. Same researchers and ot7iars,
though, still believe in the singledsea_se
concept as expressed'by essayist Susan Son-
tag, who: likens current cancer theories to
now-discarded views of' tuberculosis. Can-
cer, she says, may yeb"ntm out, as TiB:did,,
to have one principal causJ aIzer.t and be
controllable by one program cf treat.men2"
Ei gh t now, whar dfictors have are a cam+
ber of different treatments hat may be ootti,;
effectiveand practical in scme cancer cLses '
but not in others. For ins[a;:ce: caqcecs iike ;
those of the breast or co!on may resvlt Ln Ib-~
cahzed turnors that can ,x's<r-gtca1 r re- i
moved if detected early e r~u_-i C'~zr cart- ~
- cers l ike leukemia or lymphanccmcery
ina Illy
be treated with drugs or rada;on
Snme marked . advances have, been ~
achieved' against certain tyTes of car.cer. i
For example, the Cancer L.s~;ute's Ih. Up-
ton notes that "belatedly, we've begun to
Plertae Turn fo Pagt G0, Column t j

d
l~ ~~~'
~l.usi~r~ Qucst~:~ .Caricer Research
Despite Gains, Hits Disillusionment
Continued'From First Page
treabbreast cancer with drugs" that help,in-
crease the chances of survival among
women who have had breast removals. Sim-
ilarly, research into the body't immune sys-'
tem, may help doctors combat some skin
and other cancers:.lnd some uroleguts re-
port good results by implanting rad:oactlve
Isotopes In men suffering from prostate can-
ter.
Research is also continuing on some sub-
stances that may prove usefuliin the future.
bfedltal fnstitunons soon willibegin tests Ln I
cancer patients of Lnterferon, a naturN'b'ody
'substance that seems to protect celis from
. viruses. And a Brown Unlversity researcher
recently reported that In a laboratory test a
chemical called WfF seemed to convert hu,
man cancer, cells Into noncanceromsrellfi. It
probably will be years before sclenhsts can
f.tlly gauge the uselit:ness o6 such sub-
stances for people, however.
Parttcularly dramatic gains already have
been made against leukerrtia. Because of'
chemotherapy successes the Cancer Insti'
tute says, about half of all childhood leuke-
mla victims now live for at least five:years
ttYer developir.g the di5ease.,0ften, disea_se-
free survival'that long,means the patient is
curedi Just a decade ago, the institute says;,
only about 676 oG children with the disease
llved'fSve years:.
. Yet survlval'rates among all'cancer vic-
tltns have risen more slowly. In the 1930s
lt's estimated, about 25% obalUU.S. cancer
victims lived at least five years after the
diseue develbped, Despite all the reseanch
since then, the figure has risen only to about'
35 ,7',
Health oftlcfalss blame that frustrating
y pace largely on an upsuree In the Incidence
' of lung cancer, whlch still is often'fatal!
_'`They say that because of clgaret smoking
and other factors, the incidence of ]ung:can-
cer-more thaa doubled between 19t7 and'
1971 and !s st:11'lircreasimg. The of5dals say;
that.rapid rsels mascingthe progress on
ot.her fronts., _
Changes at Institute
But the prosgect of only llmitedadvances
!n :-several key areas Is ea sing: some
c.`'.acges at the Cancer Institute. For exam-
pVe, the ihstl:,tte la lesseniitg somewhat its
emphasis on cont: a,R r esearrh, In which sc1-
entistl receive money to condct stud:es in
areas set by t!e government. Crinrs of the
cancer war say such a planned efiorttends
ta restrtct ::'e rsttge of scie-ntir.c u:quiry:
Instead, t.`;e ihst:tute plans to give more
., weL3ht.to ~g-rantresea.th;,1h wh;ic'i scientLtsreeceivelnstitute financing to pursue promis-
.tagareas of basie reseaich. The cancer
.. war,..Dr.'Upton,says, L;n't "an engineertngg
problem llke put :iig men on themoon." The
goal can't.be aUaiaEd justby assigning
tasksand h:andi.ngcut mcney, he says,.add-
ing; "1i"ee still dn.n'tur.derstand enough" to
_ take thaCapproach. - %--
1.j' Health officials.concede..t.tiatmanypeo-
1 pT.ebelleve- t:iatt the cancer effo:rG' shouldi have arlvancedscientttic.kr.awledge enough
to be pays.g:more d:v!der.dsbynow. Cancer
research "now faces a crt;ss.ofcredib'6'lty,"
Dr.,Theodore Cooper, former Ass[stant Sec-
retary of Health, Education and Welfare,
toVd Sen. bicCovern's nutrition-research
panell "People are asking why after seven
years . . . haven't we conquered those fear-
ftil diseases:"''
But Dr. Cooper suggests that "ths Is a
crisis of understar.ding, of overexpecta-
tlons" thatdoesn't impugn the basic conduct
ot'th'e cancer effort.
Criticism "Fashionable"
Rep. Paul Rogerswho heads the House's
major health panel, agrees. The Florida
Democrat, who helped shape the cancer-war
legislation, recently told a group of scien-
tists that it has become "fasttiionable" to
criticise the effort "and to rationaliie that
the early years were a nalve search for.,.
a single cure for a single disease, and thatt
only recently have:we recogni:,ed that it is
more complex. But I suggest that we've
k.^towtt from the onset that itwould be a long
fight."
Yet even the people now running the can-
cer war say it has been oversold to the pub-
lic. Dr. Upton, who joined the institute last
year, blames the initial "false optunism."
Without naming names, he says, "7here
were statements by knowlldp ahle people
that. Implied more than should have been
promised."
Richard Rettig. a Rand:Corp, social s¢i-
entlSt and author of a book calied "Cancer.
Crusade," says not only polltictans misled
the public. Scientists mustshare the blame,
he add9. Despite the Inflated rhetoric that,
surrounded the cancer war, he says, manyy
researchers "felt theycou,d benefit from all
the drumbeating without feeling the ohlPga-
tion to issue even a muted deniall' of over
entltusiastic claims.
Cooling In Congress . F .,ri'.
As results haven't matched earlier expec-
tations, the polltictans whovote thee cancer-
war financingg seem tobe cooling on it a bit'.
The: Carter admintstrat:on this year pro-
posed a budget less than 1% above 12st
year's. Congress added tr.ore money, but.the
total!increase stlaitratls the inflation rate.
"Something has happened-I'm not sure
what-to people's attitudes up~he,re,^saysan aide to one of the congressional panels
that decide the Cancer Institute budget.
"The thing grew so fast" that legislators
now want to see some firm results, he says.
"But instead of coming in and talJdng re-
sults," he says, cancer researchers fzom
botli,withln andl.outside the Cancer.Institute
"have tieen talking still more dbllars,',' The
upshot,, the aide saysis:M that leg'.siatcrs will
be.lncreasingly reluctant to commit s<a moch
of thegovernment'se biomcrileat-res>.arch
money to the cancer ef'ort. _- 1
At the Cancer tnvtitute. It.seems, there's
al.readysome nostalgia lor.the he.adyearly
Idays of the cancer war. "People who've
been here along:time.telllme; 'Gee, it's a''Idaterent cllmate now,' - Dr.. Up±on says.'.
~""P.eused to goo up (ta Con~ress) acd-
~Itiardly. have toaskbrforeo t.^:cy'd give us,w1ate:verr we:wantM.' "
i
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