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The Other Face of Cancer by Dr Manu Kothari and Dr Lopa Mehta
Cancer Is Unresearchable
Before justifying the heresy that cancer
indeed is unresearchbable, it would be helpful to
define research in order to understand, science in
general, and cancerology in particular.
The dictionary 1 definition of research has
full comprehensiveness, clarify and, in the current
context, rich applicability. It defines research as a
critical and exhaustive investigation or
experimentation having for its aim the discovery of new
facts and their correct interpretation, the revision of
accepted conclusion, theories, or laws in the light of
newly discovered facts, or the practical application of
such new or revised conclusions, theories or laws.
Cancerology has searched what it could - funds,
power, statistics, but not researched, as
evidenced from its chronic failure to revise its
cherished conclusions, much less to put them into
practice. The story is singularly one of the denial of
seeing the writing on the wall. On science, we might
consider what Bobynin says, in Solzhenitsyns The
First Circle:153 What dyou
think science is - a magic wand that you just have to
wave to get what you want? Supposing the problems
been put in the wrong terms or new factors crop up?
The problem-put-wrong is cancerologys as- sumption
that cancer is conquerable.14 The
new factors that have cropped up are (a) the discovery of
the compelling biological features of cancer, and (b) the
tell-tale reversals of all therapeutic strategies because
of a single unquestonable fact viz., cancer is a
part and parcel of ourselves.
Cancerology has been a professed art of enormous
beneficence but with no profound thought or insight. The
whole public image of cancerology , Burnet 5 sums
up, is one of humanitarianism, but not of biological
scholarship. Burnet15 wonders why so much work
for so long by so many top scientists at such a colossal
cost has had so insignificant an effect on the prevention
or treatment of cancer.
The insurmountable reality about cancer is that it is not
amenable to science, being, what Weinberg154
calls, trans-science. All the accessible and
analyzable facets of cancer - cell, tumour, treatment,
cause and prevention, genetics, its very raison
d etre - for one reason or another, do not lend
themselves to prediction by what we know or can do. Set
below are the various points / counterpoints vis-a-vis
each of the above facets.
Cancer Cell
- Put in Shakespearean
style, a cancer cell is, for a person, an
ill-favoured thing, sir ( Mr. Researcher), but
mine own.
- Not one known
structural, biochemical or immunological feature
helps in distinguishing a cancer cell from a
normal cell. 98,155,156,315
- A cancer cell suffers
from an incurable selfsameness. It, therefore,
emerges and multiplies like any other cell, and
it falls prey to cytotoxic agents - drugs, X-rays
- with no greater willingness than other normal
cells of the body. By this one feature of
selfsameness, the cancer cell has as it were
cured itself, once and for ever, of any selective
action by radiotherapy or chemotherapy.
- A cancer cell carries
in itself an indelible stamp of its own
uniqueness - rendering itself neither susceptible
to a specific drug nor preventable by a vaccine.
- Cancer cells are, in
the human or animal body, in an inexhaustible
supply. The reason is simple: recruitment into
the cancerous army of many a normal cell that
neocancerates6 to form a cancer cell.
It is little wonder that patient with acute
leukemia, even when bombarded with heavy doses of
cell poisons over protracted periods, are never
free of leukemia cells. This is a classic example
of the cancerrealistic fact that whilst some
cancer cells can be destroyed, a cancer itself
cannot.
- A cancer cells
faculty of leaving its site of origin and
migrating elsewhere is predetermined,
individualistic, and unpredictable.
- The uncertainty and
individuality surrounding a cancer cell rule out
the creation of a cancer-cell-model.
- Like matter, 157
a cancer cell defies being defined. The best we
can do is to paraphrase an academic
circumlocution on matter. 158
Cancer cell is, what it is,
For it does, what it does.
And it does, what it does;
For it is, what it is.
The above lines amplify Smithers71
generalization that a cancer cell is no distinct
structural entity, but an organ of behaviour. The
same could be said of the overall phenomenon of
cancer.
Tumour
The aim of tumour research
(clinical cancer research) is, a la Kipling, to
know the what, why, when, how, where and who of
tumour formation, in a patient with cancer.
- A clinician, with all
his gadgets, is only wiser after the event. For
him to know the when of a tumour is
impossible whether the patient presents himself
for the first time, or after having been treated.
- The what
belongs to the realm of individuality of tumours:
No two tumours, even in the same person, are
exactly alike.3 All experienced
pathologists know that every tumour exhibits its
own individuality of microscopic structure.15,
239
- The why and how
belongs to acausalism, canceration and
tumour-formation being integral parts of life.
Much as a normal cell and all its
manifestations are a mystery to us, so are a
cancer cell and its manifestations.
- The what, where
and who are predictable certainties at the
herd level, but only probabilities at the
individual level. The epidemiologic concept of
probability can be best amplified by acute
lymphoblastic leukemia, a form of blood cancer.
Globally, it occurs at the rate of two or three
cases per 100,000 population per year with little
variation from country to country.98
Here, the certainty is two to three cases per
100,000 people; who will get it is the quantified
uncertainty or probability viz., 1 in
50,000 or 1 in 33,333.
- The sequence of
events from inception of a cancer to tumour
formation to disease to death is governed by
unpredictability at each step. An earlier event
in this sequence is not necessarily followed by
the next one. The scare-mongering statistics by
cancer societies are generally based on the
assumed invariable progression along the above
sequence of events. The lack of such inevitable
progression,in fact, invalidates the so-called
animal-tumour- model used in the laboratory so
far.
Treatment
- The cardinal error of
the cancer-must-be-treated dogma is the
assumption that a patient survives or feels
better because of and not despite the treatment.
A surgeon284 who paid a heavy price
for such a dogma depicted his experiences in
A personal account of the after-effects of
the modern treatment of carcinoma. This
1938 article has undiminished relevance in 1994.
- No mode of cancer
therapy can cure cancer, all attack its
detectable manifestation.
- All therapies come on
the scene when the silent spread of cancer is a fait
accompli.
- Surgery can promote
the spread of cancer, 246,247 most
other therapies promote the occurrence.6,8,15,101,102,248-250
- Cancer therapies may
ease life, but do not prolong survival, no matter
given when and how. To cite some examples:
In the case of chronic lymphatic leukemia
and breast cancer, the mortality rate is
independent of the duration of disease. Thus it
is reasonable to expect that even a very
effective chemotherapeutic agent would not
improve the survival of patients with either of
these diseases; indeed, it has so far not been
possible to demonstrate any effect of
chemotherapy on survival. This point was recently
reemphasized for acute myeloblastic leukemia of
adults.113
- The standard
tumour/test systems- e.g. Lymphoid
leukemia L1210, Sarcoma 180, Adenocarcinoma 755,
L5178 leukemia - are each a borrowed mass of
dividing cells, conveniently6 called transplanted
cancer. They have nothing to do with human or
animal cancers. This dissociation may be realized
from the fact that natural or authochthonous
cancer is 100% resistant to the drugs that are
100% effective against the so-called transplanted
cancer.
- Cancerology has no
cancer-therapy-model bearing relevance to the
human or animal situation. Successes gained in
test tubes have remained restricted to the test
tubes only.
Cause
and Prevention
Chapter Four makes it
clear that cancerology has been searching for a cause
that never was. What has no cause can have no prevention
either.
Genetics
Cancer is an
eminent vertebrate feature that functions at the
herd level, mediated by multifactorila inheritance. The
unreasoning dictates of heredity have been epitomized in
the Gaiusian dictum - Damnosa hereditas. Since
cancer has nothing to do with heredity, being basically a
herd function that must find expression at some
individual level, shall we say, of cancer, that its
an example of Damnosa herditas?
It is the corporate gene pool of a herd that determines
which type of cancer - nasopharynglea carcinoma in
Chinese populations and leukemia in Jews, around the
world - would occur, in which individuals of the herd,
and at what different ages. The occurrence of cancer in
an individual person is governed not just by his genes
but by their corporate interaction with the herd gene
pool, a realization that makes cancer not a matter of
heredity but heredity (herd-ity), and a phenomenon
most certainly beyond the ken of genetics - to be candid,
trans-genetics.
Modern genetics has given up its
one-gene-one-character concept, accepting that a single
character is controlled by many genes, and vice versa.
Which of a human cells 100,000 genes controls the
conversion of such a cell into a cancerous one is
unknown, more so since the precise definition of gene
itself is unknown.159 Any attempts at locating
cancer gene / s is fraught with problems that are beyond
the science of genetics. Burnet 15 has alluded
to the current illusion, that what can happen in E.
coli can also be made to happen in an elephant. Cure
of cancer through gene- manipulation is as tall an order
as that.
Raison
detre of Cancer
The late Leslie
Foulds emphasized the need for contemplative research on
cancer - to understand it more, than to conquer it.
Some investigators, Foulds3
remarked, are fond of saying, "what we need is
more facts." The truth is that we already have more
"facts" than anybody knows what to do
with. And the incontrovertible facts that we do
have, are enough to carry us all towards an understanding
of cancer.
The approaches that the so-called experimental cancer
research has employed lack three essential features -
comparability, predictability, and reproducibility. The
result, therefore of all this research has been
essentially unhelpful towards the elucidation either of
the cause or the cure of cancer. Contemplative cancer
research requires three qualities - the humility to
consider man on par with other animals, the comprehensive
approach of a generalist and from these two, the
acceptance of cancer as a part of living, and dying.
Cancer is researchable, but only at the level of
understanding.
Having understood cancer, what next? Acceptance. To the
frontiersmen of science, Ardrey160 points out,
the discovery of natural laws meant no more than that we
had come to know certain forces governing the
dispositions of man. But for many a popular
scientist who came later, such discoveries meant
something very different : Man could master
nature.
The hoi-polloiness of cancer scientists has
been charitably described by Burnet5 as a
beneficient trait, devoid of biological scholarship. The
latter quality ought to be evident from the current
unwritten law in science -writing and reporting: Anything
that happens to science, happens against cancer. If a
recombinant E. coli can be made, cancer can be
understood:161 and when a slime mould shifts
from amoebae-like feeding to plant-like
reproduction, we are all very near a cancer
cure.162
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