Evidence of mRNA vaccine causing cancer

I think the OP has got it wrong...

What the article does show however is that thorough trials are needed for new drugs/vaccinations, and the case depicted was of a volunteer who had a prior dire prognosis...

Unlike the experimental covid vaccines which were not thoroughly tested and pushed upon populations en masse...
 
No, I got this right, 16 people treated with bespoke mRNA vaccines which were effective in 8 of them and 7 of whom survived. For those that didn't have a response to the vaccine only 2 of 8 survived.

That sort of improvement in remission rates for pancreatic cancer is massive.
 
No, I got this right, 16 people treated with bespoke mRNA vaccines which were effective in 8 of them and 7 of whom survived. For those that didn't have a response to the vaccine only 2 of 8 survived.

That sort of improvement in remission rates for pancreatic cancer is massive.

Your headline says it causes Cancer.....??
 
That's quite encouraging. I'd heard of it cos I have a 2nd nephew who's working on non iconoclastic cancer treatments, though his are phagocytic. There's a swarm of methods being tried.
It's fascinating; you extract DNA from the tumour, sequence it to find the mutations, then design mRNA that codes for pieces of those mutant proteins. Those, are put into nanoparticle fat bubbles and injected in to the patient's muscles. The muscle cells read the mRNA and make more of the cancer protein fragments, which are "visible" to be discovered by the body's immune system, without beng dangerous themselves. So T cells get taught to attack the actual cancer because it looks like those fragments. So the muscle is just a handy factory to make bits the T cells react to .

It's like the covid vaccine, where the muscle cells read the mRNA and made copies of the spike protein, which was the one the real virus used to get into cells. . The immune system saw the spike proteins and configured loads of immune cells to attack it.

MOnoclonal antibody cancer treatments have about 3 means of working, to hit specific cancer types, but none of them have been particularly effective for pancreatic cancer. This mRNA approach uses a vaccine engineered to attack the a specific cancer active in the individual patient.
 
... Remissions! I didn't want too long a thread title, I definitely wasn't trolling anyone
In order to avoid confusion maybe you should have written something like 'Evidence of mRNA vaccine giving cancer hope?'
 
It's fascinating; you extract DNA from the tumour, sequence it to find the mutations, then design mRNA that codes for pieces of those mutant proteins.
That's probably the most interesting/revolutionary part of this. Each of those vaccines were created bespoke for each individual person. Before mRNA that was simply impossible, but now it can be done in a matter of days or hours.
 
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