The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer (95 page)

Read The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer Online

Authors: Siddhartha Mukherjee

Tags: #Civilization, #Medical, #History, #Social Science, #General

BOOK: The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer
10.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

110
“I am opposed to heart attacks and cancer”:
J. Michael Bishop, “Mary Lasker and Her Prizes: An Appreciation,”
Journal of the American Medical Association
294, no. 11 (2005): 1418–19.

111
“If a toothpaste”:
Mary Lasker Oral History Project, Part 1, Session 7.

111
“the fairy godmother of medical research”:
“The Fairy Godmother of Medical Research,”
BusinessWeek
, July 14, 1986.

111
In April 1943, Mary Lasker visited:
Mary Lasker Oral History Project, Part 1, Session 5, p. 136, and Session 16, pp. 477–79.

111
The visit left her cold:
Ibid., Session 16, pp. 477–79.

111
Of its small annual budget of:
Ibid. Also see Mary Lasker interview, October 23, 1984, in Walter Ross,
Crusade, the Official History of the American Cancer Society
(Westminster, MD: Arbor House, 1987), 33.

111
“Doctors,” she wrote, “are not administrators”:
Mary Lasker Oral History Project, Part 1, Session 7, p. 183.

112
In October 1943, Lasker persuaded a friend:
Reader’s Digest
, October 1945.

112
“My mother died from cancer”:
Letter from a soldier to Mary Lasker, 1949.

112
Over the next months:
Richard A. Rettig,
Cancer Crusade: The Story of the National Cancer Act of 1971
(Lincoln, NE: Author’s Choice Press, 1977), 21.

112
“A two-pronged attack”:
Letter from Cornelius A. Wood to Mary Lasker, January 6, 1949, Mary Lasker Papers, Box 210.

112
Albert Lasker . . . recruited Emerson Foote:
Ibid.

112
The “Lay Group”:
Letter from Mary Lasker to Jim Adams, May 13, 1945, Mary Lasker Papers.

112
In a single year, it printed 9 million:
these numbers are culled from letters and receipts found in the Mary Lasker Papers.

113
“Ladies’ Garden Club”:
Charles Cameron,
Cancer Control
, vol. 3, 1972.

113
“unjustified, troublesome and aggressive”:
James T. Patterson,
The Dread Disease: Cancer and Modern American Culture
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987), 173. Also see Rettig,
Cancer Crusade
, 22.

113
The society’s bylaws and constitution were rewritten:
Letter from Frank Adair to ACS members, October 23, 1945.

113
“The Committee should not include”:
Telegram from Jim Adams to Mary Lasker, 1947, Mary Lasker Papers.

113
“You were probably the first person”:
Letter from Rose Kushner to Mary Lasker, July 22, 1988, Rose Kushner Papers, Harvard University.

114
“a penicillin for cancer”:
“Doctor Foresees Cancer Penicillin,”
New York Times
, October 3, 1953.

114
By the early 1950s, she was regularly:
See, for instance, letter from John R. Heller to Mary Lasker, October 15, 1948, Mary Lasker Papers, Box 119; and Memorandum on Conversation with Dr. Farber, February 24, 1952, Mary Lasker Papers, Box 76.

114
“scientific treatises”:
Letter from Sidney Farber to Mary Lasker, August 19, 1955, Mary Lasker Papers, Box 170.

114
“An organizational pattern is developing”:
Ibid.

115
a “regular on the Hill”:
Robert Mayer, interview with author, July 2008.

115
“Put a tambourine in [his] hands”:
Rettig,
Cancer Crusade
, 26.

115
“I have written to you so many times”:
Letter from Sidney Farber to Mary Lasker, September 5, 1958.

“These new friends of chemotherapy”

116
The death of a man:
Czeslaw Milosz,
New and Collected Poems: 1931–2001
(New York: Ecco, 2001), 431.

116
I had recently begun to notice:
K. E. Studer and Daryl E. Chubin,
The Cancer Mission: Social Contexts of Biomedical Research
(Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1980).

116
By February 1952, Albert was confined:
Mary Lasker Oral History Project, Part 1, Session 9, p. 260.

116
“It seems a little unfair”:
Letter from Lowel Cogeshall to Mary Lasker, March 11, 1952, Mary Lasker Papers, Box 76.

117
Albert Lasker died at eight o’clock:
“A. D. Lasker Dies; Philanthropist, 72,”
New York Times
, May 31, 1952.

117
“We are at war with an insidious”:
Senator Lister Hill, “A Strong Independent Cancer Agency,” October 5, 1971, Mary Lasker Papers, Columbia University.

119
“University professors who are opposed”:
“Science and the Bomb,”
New York Times
, August 7, 1945.

120
Science the Endless Frontier:
Vannevar Bush,
Science the Endless Frontier: A Report to the President by Vannevar Bush, Director of the Office of Scientific Research and Development, July 1945
(Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office, 1945).

121
The National Science Foundation (NSF), founded in 1950:
Daniel S. Greenberg,
Science, Money, and Politics: Political Triumph and Ethical Erosion
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), 167.

121
“long term, basic scientific research”:
Ibid., 419.

121
“so great a co-ordination of medical scientific labor”:
Stephen Parks Strickland,
Politics, Science, and the Dread Disease: A Short History of the United States Medical Research Policy
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1972), 16.

121
“Should I refuse my dinner”:
Ernest E. Sellers, “Early Pragmatists,”
Science
154, no. 3757 (1996): 1604.

121
The outspoken Philadelphia pathologist Stanley Reimann:
Stanley Reimann, “The
Cancer Problem as It Stands Today,”
Transactions and Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia
13 (1945): 21.

122
the Cancer Chemotherapy National Service Center:
C. G. Zubrod et al., “The Chemotherapy Program of the National Cancer Center Institute: History, Analysis, and Plans,”
Cancer Chemotherapy Reports
50 (1966): 349–540; V. T. DeVita, “The Evolution of Therapeutic Research in Cancer,”
New England Journal of Medicine
298 (1978): 907–10.

122
Farber was ecstatic, but impatient:
Letter from Sidney Farber to Mary Lasker, August 19, 1955, Mary Lasker Papers, Box 170.

122
One such antibiotic came from a rod-shaped microbe:
Selman Waksman and H. B. Woodruff, “Bacteriostatic and Bacteriocidal Substances Produced by a Soil Actinomyces,”
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine
45 (1940): 609.

122
Farber and actinomycin D: Sidney Farber, Giulio D’Angio, Audrey Evans, and Anna Mitus, “Clinical Studies of Actinomycin D with Special Reference to Wilms’ Tumor in Children,”
Annals of the New York Academy of Science
89 (1960): 421–25.

123
“In about three weeks lungs previously riddled with”:
Giulio D’Angio, “Pediatric Oncology Refracted through the Prism of Wilms’ Tumor: A Discourse,”
Journal of Urology
164 (2000): 2073–77.

124
Sonja Goldstein’s recollections: Jeremiah Goldstein, “Preface to My Mother’s Diary,”
Journal of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology
30, no. 7 (2008): 481–504.

“The butcher shop”

128
Randomised screening trials are bothersome:
H. J. de Koning, “Mammographic Screening: Evidence from Randomised Controlled Trials,”
Annals of Oncology
14 (2003): 1185–89.

128
The best [doctors] seem to have a sixth sense:
Michael LaCombe, “What Is Internal Medicine?”
Annals of Internal Medicine
118, no. 5 (1993): 384–88.

128
Emil Freireich and Emil Frei: John Laszlo,
The Cure of Childhood Leukemia: Into the Age of Miracles
(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995), 118–20.

129
“I have never seen Freireich in a moderate mood”:
Emil Frei III, “Confrontation, Passion, and Personalization,”
Clinical Cancer Research
3 (1999): 2558.

129
Gordon Zubrod, the new director:
Emil Frei III, “Gordon Zubrod, MD,”
Journal of Clinical Oncology
17 (1999): 1331. Also see Taylor,
Pioneers in Pediatric Oncology
, 117.

130
Freireich came just a few weeks later:
Grant Taylor,
Pioneers in Pediatric Oncology
(Houston: University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, 1990), 117.

130
“Frei’s job,” one researcher recalled:
Edward Shorter,
The Health Century
(New York: Doubleday, 1987), 192.

130
To avert conflicts:
Andrew M. Kelahan, Robert Catalano, and Donna Marinucci, “The History, Structure, and Achievements of the Cancer Cooperative Groups,” (May/June 2000): 28–33.

131
“For the first time”:
Robert Mayer, interview with author, July 2008. Also see Frei, “Gordon Zubrod,” 1331; and Taylor,
Pioneers in Pediatric Oncology
, 117.

131
Hill and randomized trials: Austin Bradford Hill,
Principles of Medical Statistics
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1966); A. Bradford Hill, “The Clinical Trial,”
British Medical Bulletin
7, no. 4 (1951): 278–82.

132
“The analogy of drug resistance”:
Emil Freireich, interview with author, September 2009.

132
The first protocol was launched:
Emil Frei III et al., “A Comparative Study of Two Regimens of Combination Chemotherapy in Acute Leukemia,”
Blood
13, no. 12 (1958): 1126–48; Richard Schilsky et al., “A Concise History of the Cancer and Leukemia Group B,”
Clinical Cancer Research
12, no. 11, pt. 2 (2006): 3553s–55s.

133
“This work is one of the first comparative studies”:
Frei et al., “Comparative Study of Two Regimens.”

134
“The resistance would be fierce”:
Emil Freireich, personal interview.

134
a “butcher shop”:
Vincent T DeVita, Jr. and Edward Chu, “A History of Cancer Chemotherapy,”
Cancer Research
68, no. 21 (2008): 8643.

An Early Victory

135
But I do subscribe to the view:
Brian Vastag, “Samuel Broder, MD, Reflects on the 30
th
Anniversary of the National Cancer Act,”
Journal of the American Medical Association
286 (2001): 2929–31.

135
Min Chiu Li: Emil J. Freireich, “Min Chiu Li: A Perspective in Cancer Therapy,”
Clinical Cancer Research
8 (2002): 2764–65.

136
Li and Ethel Longoria: Mickey Goulian, interview with author, September 2007.

136
“She was bleeding so rapidly”:
Ibid.

137
Li and Hertz rushed to publish:
M. C. Li, R. Hertz, and D. M. Bergenstal, “Therapy of Choriocarcinoma and Related Trophoblastic Tumors with Folic Acid and Purine Antagonists,”
New England Journal of Medicine
259, no. 2 (1958): 66–74.

137
Li’s use of hcg level in chemotherapy: John Laszlo,
The Cure of Childhood Leukemia: Into the Age of Miracles
(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995), 145–47.

137
In mid-July, the board summoned:
Ibid.

137
“Li was accused of experimenting on people”:
Emil Freireich, interview with author, September 2009.

138
When Freireich heard about Li’s dismissal:
Laszlo,
Cure of Childhood Leukemia
, 145.

Mice and Men

139
A model is a lie that helps:
Margie Patlak, “Targeting Leukemia: From Bench to Bedside,”
FASEB Journal
16 (2002): 273E.

139
“Clinical research is a matter of urgency”:
John Laszlo,
The Cure of Childhood Leukemia: Into the Age of Miracles
(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995.

139
To test three drugs, the group insisted:
Ibid., 142.

139
“The wards were filling up with these terribly sick children”:
Emil Freireich, interview, September 2009.

139
Vincristine had been discovered in 1958:
Norman R. Farnsworth, “Screening Plants for New Medicines,” in
Biodiversity
, ed. E. O. Wilson (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1988), 94; Normal R. Farnsworth, “Rational Approaches Applicable to the Search for and Discovery of New Drugs From Plants,” in
Memorias del 1er Symposium Latinoamericano y del Caribe de Farmacos Naturales, La Habana, Cuba, 21 al 28 de Junio, 1980, 27–59
(Montevideo, Uruguay: UNESCO Regional Office
Academia de Ciencias de Cuba y Comisión Nacional de Cuba ante la UNESCO).

140
“Frei and Freireich were simply taking drugs”:
David Nathan,
The Cancer Treatment Revolution
(Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2007), 59.

140
A scientist from Alabama, Howard Skipper:
Laszlo,
Cure of Childhood Leukemia
, 199–209.

141
Skipper emerged with two pivotal findings:
See, for example, Howard E. Skipper, “Cellular Kinetics Associated with ‘Curability’ of Experimental Leukemias,” in William Dameshek and Ray M. Dutcher, eds.,
Perspectives in Leukemia
(New York: Grune & Stratton, 1968), 187–94.

141
“Maximal, intermittent, intensive, up-front”:
Emil Frei, “Curative Cancer Chemotherapy,”
Cancer Research
45 (1985): 6523–37.

Other books

Cinderella Sidelined by Syms, Carly
Young Bloods by Scarrow, Simon
Resurgence by Charles Sheffield
Forbidden in February by Suzanna Medeiros
Weekend Warriors by Fern Michaels
Red Lily by Nora Roberts
Las aventuras de Pinocho by Carlo Collodi
Snow Angels by Fern Michaels, Marie Bostwick, Janna McMahan, Rosalind Noonan