Dear Friends and Collegues, A few years ago, when then new Republican Congress initiated cuts in the US budget, there was a potential threat that severe cuts will be imposed on funding of NIH. The lonely supporters of the NIH funding in the US Congress were Sen. Mark Hatfield (R.-Ore) and Sen. Tom Harkin (D.-Iowa). Scientific community initiated, at that time, intense lobbying in support of these Senators' proposal to increase rather than cut the NIH funding. I was appealing on this forum, to write letters of support for the initiative of these Senators. The support was outpouring from other organizations, including AACR. We have won, and NIH funding escaped the budgetary cuts. Actually, the Republican Congress is now more inclined to support the biomedical research since it recently increased support for NIH above the level initially requested by the Clinton Administration. It seems that we have new opportunity to expand federal funding for research. Specifically, two recent actions in the US Senate are in favor of support for medical research. Sen. Connie Mack (R-Fla) introduced a resolution emphasizing the benefits of medical research, stating: "It is the sense of the Senate that appropriations for the NIH should be increased by 100% over the next 5 FY". Sen. Phil Gramm (R.-Tex) introduced legislation, The National Research Investment Act of 1997, to "double the amount of federal investment in basic science and medical research over 10 years as a way to invest in the future of our nation and its people...to enhance the quality of life for all Americans ... and to guarantee our leadership in science and medicine". The momentum, thus, shifts favorably towards biomedical funding. It appears that we have new friends in the US Congress. I strongly appeal, therefore, maintain the momentum and to support resolutions of Sens. Mack and Gramm by sending letters to your Senators and Congressmen/women. In the Appended Envelope I have included my article which emphasizes the low level of federal funding for cancer research. I was using this text in my earlier appeals to focus attention of public and political figures on the problem of inadequate funding for cancer research. Please be free to cite the statistics from this article or include it with the letters to your Senators and Congressmen/women. Please remember that the increased funding for NIH is advantageous not only the US researchers who may receive more grants, or to the US citizens - the patients who may directly benefit from new discoveries in biomedicine, but most importantly it benefits all humanity. Science has no borders and we have become the "global village". The research discoveries in one country benefit everyone on this globe. Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz ------------------- CANCERFU.LET follows -------------------- Inadequate Funding of Cancer Research This year alone, over 1.2 million Americans will be diagnosed with cancer and over 600,000 will die of this dreadful disease. Thus, every 30 seconds a person is stricken with cancer and every minute another is dying. The number of Americans dying of cancer every month is close to the number of Americans killed during the entire Vietnam war. Statistically, at least one person in family of four is expected to develop cancer in her or his lifetime. The person dying of cancer is 14 years younger than the one dying of cardiovascular causes. Many of the victims are children. Behind these statistics are uncountable personal tragedies. Not only the tragedies of those diagnosed and dying, often in a prolonged and painful way, but also of their families and friends. The sum that the U.S. federal government spends on cancer research (NIH, National Cancer Institute) this year is about two billion dollars, less than $ 10 per person. This amount is minuscule for a country with a 1.5 trillion dollars national budget. This is especially striking when compared with wasteful spending on other purposes. Despite the dissolution of the Soviet Union, our main military adversary, we are still spending over 150 times more on defense and 15 times more on spying than on cancer. Each B2 bomber costs the equivalent of the yearly cancer research budget. The same is true for a single nuclear powered submarine. Yet we still are building these dinosaures of the cold war era, for which no military targets now exist. The total sum which we are now paying for the fraud of bankrupt S&L institutions would fund the National Cancer Institute, at the current rate, for one hundred years. The list of items on which our tax money is being spent at a rate of billions of dollars per year, in a wasteful and sometimes ridiculous way, can go on and on. With new tools provided by molecular biology, significant strides have been made during the past decade to understand the mechanisms of cancer. The research of the past five years has brought a revolution in understanding the mechanism of cell proliferation ("cell cycle") and cell death ("apoptosis"). These are the most most essential cellular events associated with cancer. Numerous genes which are responsible for normal cells turning cancerous have been identified, isolated and cloned. We are thus provided, for the first time, with a rational basis for entirely new strategies of cancer prevention and treatment. For example, the gene-engineering approach offers the prospect of either transforming a cancer cell into a normal one, or selective killing of the former. It is now only a matter of time when more effective treatments will be introduced into the clinic. Unfortunately, time is running out for those stricken with cancer and those who will be struck tomorrow. There is no doubt that acceleration of cancer research will save many lives. If not our lives, certainly the lives of our children and grandchildren. The progress in cancer research also benefits areas such as AIDS, genetic, immunological and aging associated diseases, as well as many other biomedical fields. No shortage of scientists that are able and willing to work in the field of cancer exists. The funds, however, are inadequate to support their positions and research. The latter is getting more and more costly as the tools are progressively more sophisticated. Less than 15% of the research proposals approved for support are now being funded by the National Cancer Institute. Many outstanding projects fall below the funding level. The most innovative and most imaginative programs have particularly bad prospects of funding. This is due to the fact that there is an inherent element of uncertainty of the outcome in such projects. With very limited funding usually only the "safe" projects, with a very predictable outcomes, can succesfully compete. Many talented researchers leave the field. Fewer students are willing to take up careers in cancer research. Since last year we have seen an alarming, nearly two-fold decrease in the number of young scientists applying for NIH grants. Private foundations provide some help, but can in no way substitute for the lack of interest at the national level. Repeated polls indicate that over 80 % of the respondents are willing to pay additional tax if it is used to support biomedical research. It is important to point out the purely economic importance of investment in health research. Biotechnology is the most rapidly growing industry, worldwide. Government support for biotechnology is proportionally greater in Japan, Germany and France than it is in the United States. Consequently, we are losing the preeminence we once had, and with it goes a multi-billion- dollar industry. Needless to say, the investment we make now in basic biomedical research will bring real savings in the cost of patient care for years to come. One may ask why the pharmaceutical industry does not rapidly develop anticancer drugs and thus why public funds are needed for this purpose. One reason is that the industry is not interested in testing and promoting research in areas where the potential drug cannot be patented. It now costs approximately a quarter of billion of dollars to develop a single drug to the point of its application in the clinic. One has to be naive to expect that any company will invest such a sum if no profit is anticipated. Perhaps thousands of promising new drugs collect dust on shelfs of many laboratories, because for one reason or another they cannot be patented. Another reason is that some cancer types are rare. Development of a drug that would be active in only one type of rare cancer and thus have a limited market, also is not within the scope of the pharmaceutical industry. Likewise, the research which carries significant risk or uncertainty in terms of providing the immediate profit, is unlikely to be funded by the industry. Cancer collects its terrible toll every day. We need at least to quadruple the public spending on cancer research to find the cure for this terrible disease in our lifetime. Is it too much to ask to spend the equivalent of three B2 bombers per year to achieve this goal? Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz, M.D., Ph.D. Professor of Medicine N.Y. Medical College in Valhalla, N.Y.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Apr 03 2002 - 11:49:26 EST