> Sorry, as someone in this field, this is bullshit. It is in mice.
Nice to hear an expert opinion. Let's hope your comment goes back to black. I have a lot of question!
> This is a nothing burger.
Is it enough for a bread-mayo-bread sandwich? Lettuce?
IIUC the bacteria makes the cancer disappear for two weeks, until they end the study and kill the mice. (IIUC this is timeline is usual for very early studies.) They tried other bacterias and one of them made the cancer disappear for a few days, so I'm worried about the long time efficiency of this method.
Is injecting the bacterias a second time as efficient as the first time, or the inmune system kills the bacteria before they hurt the cancer?
What happen in case of metastasis? Each one must be injected with the bacterias or they will jump and make all of them disappear?
Does the bacteria infect other organs and kill you? Is there a good antibiotic in case the bacteria cause problems?
They used cancers that were 200mm3 (i.e. like a sphere of 7mm = 1/4 inch). What happens in bigger cancers? Does bigger cancer have better irrigation and make it more difficult for the bacteria to survive? What happens to tiny hidden metastasis (that probably still have good enough irrigation)?