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chrisamiller | 2 years ago

I hate to be that guy, because it seems like there is some interesting science behind this press release hype. There are, however, many many miles between "effects in a mouse model" and "human therapeutic", let alone "cure". I wish them the best of luck as they consider safety and efficacy in clinical trials.

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BenFranklin100|2 years ago

Correct. However, research models like mice play a critical role in revealing key mechanisms of actions for many diseases. One can crudely think of it as a reverse engineering challenge - picking apart the key functions and program flow from obfuscated object code. Not all of the program logic or functions will have 1-1 correlates to humans, but these models can provide important clues for new therapeutics that might work in people. These types of experiments simply can’t ethically be done in humans.

And I entirely agree with your other point: university press releases are notorious for hyping research. It does the biomedical field a disservice, and gives the impression clinical trials are but an afterthought. Nothing could be further from the truth.

chrisamiller|2 years ago

I do cancer research, including using mouse models, so believe me, I know the difficulty :-)

Getting promising drugs into humans is -hard-, and this research is interesting, but this press release is still kind of shitty.