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Death of Cancer
Article

Death of Cancer

A critical mass of medical knowledge could soon end the death threat of cancer, but politics stands in the way

Aeon, 2016


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Scientific
  • Eye Opening

Recommendation

For decades, battles have been fought in the war on cancer. Soon, the war could and should be over. Vincent DeVita is a pioneer oncologist and former director of the National Cancer Institute. Writing with his journalist daughter Elizabeth DeVita-Raeburn, he explains in plain language the “hallmarks” of cancer cells and outlines what kind of cancer research would be necessary – if only government laws allowed it. getAbstract recommends this expert yet accessible article to cancer patients and would like to put this plea for a new cancer act into the hands of those in charge.

Take-Aways

  • Since 1971, cancer research has made major advances.
  • Three breakthroughs – chemotherapy, targeted therapy and immunotherapy – have led to a significant decline in cancer mortality.
  • Two major research papers defined eight characteristics of cancer cells. Targeting these hallmarks could mean the “death of cancer.”

About the Authors

Vincent DeVita is a professor at Yale and the former director of the National Cancer Institute. His daughter Elizabeth DeVita-Raeburn is a science journalist.