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Agitated_Narwhal_92 t1_j7fjdey wrote

Stahhhp. Just go with CRISPR. Why waste time talking about wild cure ideas which will probably never even see daylight? The earlier we can perfect and commence human trials for Gene therapy, the quicker it can be made available for market.

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The_Puss_Slayer t1_j7fnele wrote

"Nooooo don't make broad stroke searches for multiple cancer treatments, only look at this exact specific theoretical treatment I deem as the best with 0 human trials"

What.

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Agitated_Narwhal_92 t1_j7fnwa4 wrote

Are you serious, there have been multiple human trials woth CRISPR. WHAT. We keep hearing a fucktonn of cancer cure researches. Someone checked the algae that grows on a sloth's body because of mack of movement and found anti cancer properties in the algae. What are we, gunna harvest sloth algae now? What I meant is the money that is spent on cancer research is finite and such resource should be allocated to something that can give verifiable result in a reasonable time frame. Which CRISPR does. Sound waves, algae, Indian and Chinese mushrooms and herbs, might contain a lot of good properties that may help orevebt cancer to certain extent, doesn't mean we treat it the same way we treat CRISPR.

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sorenflying t1_j7fqb0q wrote

CRISPR was literally discovered in random bacteria, you can’t just not look at anything that has promising leads. Grant funded research requires you to apply for this money and preliminary data is given as reasoning for why the researcher should be funded for what they are interested in looking at, so this could have had very promising preliminary data for them to even get this far. Also not every treatment works for every single person, if CRISPR ever becomes a widespread treatment option it doesn’t guarantee that it works for every single person, immunotherapy has this very issue.

Source: Am a PhD candidate in a renowned cancer immunology lab

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Noobexe1 t1_j7g9lmp wrote

CRISPR is less feasible than the kurzgesagt video you watched made you think. It’s an experimental technology, not some kind of button you press to remove cancer from people.

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TbonerT t1_j7fo9r6 wrote

These are easy, though. Scientists have figured out that an hour in a room with a 40hz LED significantly reduced Alzheimer’s symptoms and then it turns out that they can also do it with a sound.

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