We would love to hear your thoughts about our site and services, please take our survey here.
London South East prides itself on its community spirit, and in order to keep the chat section problem free, we ask all members to follow these simple rules. In these rules, we refer to ourselves as "we", "us", "our". The user of the website is referred to as "you" and "your".
By posting on our share chat boards you are agreeing to the following:
The IP address of all posts is recorded to aid in enforcing these conditions. As a user you agree to any information you have entered being stored in a database. You agree that we have the right to remove, edit, move or close any topic or board at any time should we see fit. You agree that we have the right to remove any post without notice. You agree that we have the right to suspend your account without notice.
Please note some users may not behave properly and may post content that is misleading, untrue or offensive.
It is not possible for us to fully monitor all content all of the time but where we have actually received notice of any content that is potentially misleading, untrue, offensive, unlawful, infringes third party rights or is potentially in breach of these terms and conditions, then we will review such content, decide whether to remove it from this website and act accordingly.
Premium Members are members that have a premium subscription with London South East. You can subscribe here.
London South East does not endorse such members, and posts should not be construed as advice and represent the opinions of the authors, not those of London South East Ltd, or its affiliates.
Cancer is the individual ...
even the best matched transplants still require
Medications After a Transplant. After an organ transplant, you will need to take immunosuppressant (anti-rejection) drugs. These drugs help prevent your immune system from attacking ("rejecting") the donor organ. Typically, they must be taken for the lifetime of your transplanted organ.
so every cancer and patient is not the same ...
which is why building a personal vaccine is possible ..
I can't open BBC articles, but I'm grateful for the heads up - I'm sure another reliable source will print the facts at some point.
It sounds interesting.
Thanks inan, yeah that was my question................""Now we have a man who can do what the specialists find so hard to do?? Forgive me for being a bit synical but how do his cancers grow so large and metastasise before his white blood cells kick in???""
That is a subject I have discussed with my own oncologist too many times to remember in the last 7/8 years. I have actually seen a couple of patient files, anonymous of course, showing the mutations that occur. No wonder with all the amazing technology they have at their disposal, that seems to be the biggest stumbling block of all. Thanks for replying.
its finding the trigger .......... C7 .. if the patient had an immune system that clears cancer it would not have appeared in the first place ... so something triggered the response, now as we know cancer mutates and conditions change
take moditope for instance it will only work under certain conditions
"stress cells" and "Inflammation"
we know some patients indeed have natural response with a citrullinated Cd4 CtL because there is a suppression side that has also been identified in the mouse which is a Fox3 cd25 Cd4 so the attack and expansion is controlled .. which is why Lindy used the adjuvant to slew the moditope CD4 to TH1 which has the effect of shutting down suppression to pro inflammatory plus expansion
so in some patients Moditope will be a Booster to an existing response but flipping the environment to pro inflammatory
if a patient still does not respond or a partial response you then can target that Cd4 Fox3 cd25 to neutralise it ..
some call this a delay ... i call it "the learning curve" for a new platform
That was first reported the 6th March 2015.
I would reckon there is enough instances of self curing cancer to fill many volumes, in the meantime all treatments focus on urging the bodies immune systen to fight cancer that these people seem to be able to do without treatment. Programming T_Cells................hmm
This article was posted yesterday on Advfn by David Evans.
Also another interesting article below
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150306-the-mystery-of-vanishing-cancer
The Daily Mail are certainly building up to World Cancer Day with a string of cancer articles.
Now we have a man who can do what the specialists find so hard to do?? Forgive me for being a bit synical but how do his cancers grow so large and metastasise before his white blood cells kick in??? Certainly seems real enough, an extraordinary man.
Good Morning All
Not sure whether this has been published already but interesting!!
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7926803/How-retired-father-four-59-survived-string-cancers-thanks-unique-blood-cells.html
ATB
ISA Pharmaceuticals too. Still going through it, I had no idea this conference was going on.
I see Sean Marett of BionTech is one of the leading lights.
Wow that is some list. Appears we are presenting on Day 1 at 16.45, but boy that PDF is 36 pages!!!
Thanks cc, great find.
Nice to see that Scancell will be at the ' onfloor showcase area ' at the 6th LSX World Congress in London on February 4th World Cancer Day.
https://www.lsxleaders.com/hubfs/378634/LSXWC2020%20Brochure.pdf