Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

How Reliable Are Cancer Studies?

#1
C C Offline
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/arch...le/513485/

EXCERPT: In recent years, scientists have been dealing with concerns about a reproducibility crisis—the possibility that many published findings may not actually be true. Psychologists have grappled intensively with this problem, trying to assess its scope and look for solutions. And two reports from pharmaceutical companies have suggested that cancer biologists have to face a similar reckoning.

In 2011, Bayer Healthcare said that its in-house scientists could only validate 25 percent of basic studies in cancer and other conditions. (Drug companies routinely do such checks so they can use the information in those studies as a starting point for developing new drugs.) A year later, Glenn Begley and Lee Ellis from Amgen said that the firm could only confirm the findings in 6 out of 53 landmark cancer papers—just 11 percent. Perhaps, they wrote, that might explain why “our ability to translate cancer research to clinical success has been remarkably low.”

But citing reasons of confidentiality, neither the Bayer nor Amgen teams released the list of papers that they checked, or their methods or results. Ironically, without that information, there was no way of checking if their claims about irreproducibility were themselves reproducible. “The reports were shocking, but also seemed like finger-pointing,” says Tim Errington, a cell biologist at the Center for Open Science (COS)....
Reply
#2
Zinjanthropos Offline
(Jan 21, 2017 04:39 AM)C C Wrote: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/arch...le/513485/

EXCERPT: In recent years, scientists have been dealing with concerns about a reproducibility crisis—the possibility that many published findings may not actually be true. Psychologists have grappled intensively with this problem, trying to assess its scope and look for solutions. And two reports from pharmaceutical companies have suggested that cancer biologists have to face a similar reckoning.  

In 2011, Bayer Healthcare said that its in-house scientists could only validate 25 percent of basic studies in cancer and other conditions. (Drug companies routinely do such checks so they can use the information in those studies as a starting point for developing new drugs.) A year later, Glenn Begley and Lee Ellis from Amgen said that the firm could only confirm the findings in 6 out of 53 landmark cancer papers—just 11 percent. Perhaps, they wrote, that might explain why “our ability to translate cancer research to clinical success has been remarkably low.”

But citing reasons of confidentiality, neither the Bayer nor Amgen teams released the list of papers that they checked, or their methods or results. Ironically, without that information, there was no way of checking if their claims about irreproducibility were themselves reproducible. “The reports were shocking, but also seemed like finger-pointing,” says Tim Errington, a cell biologist at the Center for Open Science (COS)....

Maybe I'm out to lunch here but I've always thought cancer researchers were looking in the wrong place. I think of cancer as the body's cells evolving to suit the environment they live in(the body). To me a cancer cell is simply a mutation of a normal evolving cell. The cancer cell itself would also evolve. How then, is a drug going to cure cancer? It would be like curing life of evolution....my two casual cents
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Article Be skeptical of studies designed to scare you about CTE and sports C C 0 66 Sep 16, 2023 06:32 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article Startling estimate of how many clinical-trial studies are fake or fatally flawed C C 0 64 Jul 19, 2023 01:03 PM
Last Post: C C
  Article New studies refute assumptions about link between power & concern about reputation C C 0 60 Apr 5, 2023 09:26 PM
Last Post: C C
  Hawthorn effect: one of the most influential social science studies is pretty bad C C 0 70 Feb 18, 2023 07:51 PM
Last Post: C C
  Hijacked journal still being indexed in Scopus + Viral studies likelier to be bogus C C 0 58 Feb 7, 2023 04:39 PM
Last Post: C C
  Vitamin D COVID-19 study is a mess + Science is thin on cult studies C C 1 154 Feb 27, 2021 07:27 PM
Last Post: Syne
  In psychology & other social sciences, many studies [still] fail reproducibility test C C 0 388 Aug 29, 2018 07:22 AM
Last Post: C C
  Experimental philosophy is more reliable & robust than psychology C C 0 344 Jul 14, 2018 08:28 AM
Last Post: C C
  Were These Well-Known Gender Studies Just Made Up? C C 0 353 Dec 3, 2017 05:55 AM
Last Post: C C
  Are scientific papers still reliable? Or have we compromised quality for production? C C 0 438 May 31, 2016 01:51 AM
Last Post: C C



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)