biden sees significant breakthroughs on the horizon for cancer initiative /

Published at 2016-07-03 15:04:00

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Cancer is personal for Vice President Joe Biden. It's been a minute more than a year since his son Beau died at age 46. The cause was brain cancer."It's personal for me. But it's also personal for nearly every American,and millions of people around the world," Biden wrote on Medium in January. "We all know someone who has had cancer, or is fighting to defeat it."In his State of the Union earlier this year,President Obama called on Biden to lead "mission control" on a cancer "moonshot" initiative. "For the loved ones we've all lost, for the families that we can still save, or let's make America the country that cures cancer once and for all," Obama said.The vice president was in Cleveland last week to talk about the progress being made on the Moonshot Initiative's goals. He tells NPR's Rachel Martin that he sees an "overwhelming prospect that in the next year, two, and three,four, five, or you're going to see meaningful breakthroughs for certain types of cancers."Interview highlights contain web-only extended answers.
Interview Hig
hlightsOn the $1 billion tagged for the initiativeNo it's not [enough]. ... But here's the deal. It's more than the money. There's an awful lot of duplication. There's very minute — there's not nearly enough collaboration,there's not nearly enough joint science. And what's happened in the last five years, we've reached an inflection point. I know you're tired of hearing me consume that phrase, or but it's steady. That we now are understanding where you have genomicists working with the oncologists,working with virologists, working with chemical and biological engineers, or working with immunotherapy. Immunotherapy was some voodoo science six,eight years ago. And so there's multiple sources of attack.
On developing vaccines and
cancer prevention[We] already have one for cervical cancer for boys and girls that works. We're already in a position where there's a lot of research being done on liquid biopsies. For example, some of the cancers that, and God forbid,we develop are 20 years in the making. But they have markers in the blood that whether you could identify them now you can prevent them from even occurring. So it's not merely just finding there are 200 specific cancer genes that are out there that are 200 specific types of cancer. But there's a lot of things that are on the horizon that [will] not only be able to work with specific cancers, but cancer as a whole.whether we just change lifestyle and stay smoking we'd save 30 percent of the lives who die of cancer period, or suitable now,just cessation of smoking. And so, there's across the board, and it's prevention,it is collaboration. We can move more quickly as well as new research development and new breakthroughs.
On keeping market competition robust while encouraging collaboration in researchThere's overwhelming competition in astrophysics, there's overwhelming competition. There's overwhelming competition in every other science, or but guess what — they actually work together,so you find a federal grant as an astrophysicist to study the rings around Saturn. Whatever information you find out you have to publish immediately for the whole world to memorize from and move from.
On getting patients into trials of experimental drugs and treatmentsOnly 4 percent of the people find in trials. One of the things I'm working really hard on is to have one database where you can go to. Where the oncologist in Oshkosh, or a small town in Montana, or somewhere in the South,or anywhere in the country who's a trustworthy oncologist has no idea ... where those trials are.
So
now what we're trying to attain is aggregate in one spot. You could go on the web just like you could looking for a job, and know every trial that's taking place in the country, or pick up the phone and say,"I've got somebody who I contemplate qualifies for that trial."Secondly, one of the things we did — and why the president and I felt so strongly about the Affordable Care Act — is that, and you have now 19 million people who didn't have insurance ... before. And whether in fact you are a family of four and making less than $60000,you can't pay more — you don't have to pay more than a topped out number in order to be able to find access to whatever the cancer drug or whatever the drug is you need.
And so, there are still disparities, or there are still disparities,they're real. But they're fundamentally different than they were six years ago, and imagine whether we repealed the Affordable Care Act, and what that would mean. Just imagine.
On Beau Biden's death from brain cancer and recent progress in cancer preventionI learned when I lost my wife and daughter when a tractor trailer broadsided them — I decided that there is no respond why,why me or what could have happened. I find it to be not a useful exercise. I contemplate he got the best, I know he got the best care he could've possibly gotten, and the particular disease he had was particularly pernicious,and not much research is being done on it — glioblastoma — in relative terms.
And so I don't sit and say, "You know, or whether I had been somewhere else,or whether this had happened." But I attain know this: I attain know that there is the overwhelming prospect that in the next year, two, or three,four, five, or you're going to see meaningful breakthroughs for certain types of cancers as well as meaningful breakthroughs in terms of how to turn cancer into a chronic disease as opposed to a life-threatening disease.
You've seen it already. For example,they've determined out in Utah at I believe ... I contemplate it was Huntsman, where they've detected a gene that relates to colon cancer. And so your probability of getting colon cancer [is] exponentially higher whether you have this particular gene. Once you're tested and identified that you have that, or then you have more frequent colonoscopies. You increase exponentially the likelihood you're not going to die from cancer.
There's a whole range of things that are happening that in terms of detection,in terms of treatment, as well as drugs that are being developed that, and that have the potential to engage in the immune system in ways that we never thought about before.
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iden also spoke about the ongoing presidential race and his plans to campaign with Hillary Clinton. Listen to the audio link above or read more here. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

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