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greygoo222yesterday at 6:17 PM2 repliesview on HN

Both patient participation in clinical trials and compassionate use of experimental treatments are fairly common for cancer patients, with various accessibility barriers. (One issue with the latter, for example, is that the incentives aren't lined up for companies to provide unapproved drugs to dying patients, you're way more likely to get a horrible complication that leads to bad press than a miraculous recovery).

Here's an insightful blog series about Jake Seliger's experience participating in clinical trials. He was a regular HackerNews user who passed away in 2024: https://bessstillman.substack.com/p/please-be-dying-but-not-...


Replies

ameliusyesterday at 7:47 PM

What is the success rate of a clinical trial? Just to see things in perspective.

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imtringuedtoday at 11:41 AM

If someone is about to die and you save them at the last moment, aren't you basically reviving a zombie at that point? He has eight new tumors. You can pop almost all of them and still be left with a terminal patient.

Even if you're buying time with every trial, all you've done is turn the patient into a lab rat for physicians to play around with. The ideal patient needs to be dead enough to have no human rights, but alive enough to participate in the trial. The hope of a miracle cure means the patient doesn't believe himself to be dead enough to not have human rights anymore. It's a paradox.

Signing the documents for such a trial is equivalent to signing your consent for euthanasia. It shifts the blame of death from the cancer to the company performing the trial. It's an extended form of organ donations where you donate your entire body while you're still alive.