...Through the 1950’s and ’60’s Chester Southam, an oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, experimentally injected cancer cells into more than 300 people, often without properly informing them. Some subjects, which included prison inmates, developed tumors from the injected cells. (Southam was never prosecuted and was later elected president of the American Association for Cancer Research.)
Three things struck me as odd about this passage: (1) that I had never seen references to this research before; (2) it seems to have been a key experiment in determining that some forms of cancer are communicable; and (3) the lack of outcry, especially coming so soon after the Holocaust.
Southam later had this to say about what he had done, quoted in the NYT:
"It is not necessary to present [the subject] with what you feel are inconsequential data and [it is] unethical to ram down his throat information which is detrimental to his condition."
Thirty years later, Southam remained convinced his research was both sound and scientifically important. He was unwavering in his belief that none of the patients injected with the cancer cells would contract the disease.
When I asked, “What if they had?” he calmly replied, “If they did, we’d just cut it out.”
Wild ass guess:
Some patients developed localized tumors at the injection site, which were eradicated by the host immune system. Thus some could have tumors without really developing a disease we would call cancer
Edit: I've actually seen this exact reaction with subcutaneous injections of tumor cells in mice.
I just watched a few things about block 10, operation paperclip and nuremberg 2nd trial and .. indeed it's unbelievable that such things happened in the 50s.
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[ 2.4 ms ] story [ 27.9 ms ] threadhttps://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17481404
Three things struck me as odd about this passage: (1) that I had never seen references to this research before; (2) it seems to have been a key experiment in determining that some forms of cancer are communicable; and (3) the lack of outcry, especially coming so soon after the Holocaust.
Southam later had this to say about what he had done, quoted in the NYT:
"It is not necessary to present [the subject] with what you feel are inconsequential data and [it is] unethical to ram down his throat information which is detrimental to his condition."
https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/26/archives/many-scientific-...
And later:
Thirty years later, Southam remained convinced his research was both sound and scientifically important. He was unwavering in his belief that none of the patients injected with the cancer cells would contract the disease.
When I asked, “What if they had?” he calmly replied, “If they did, we’d just cut it out.”
https://nypost.com/2013/12/28/nycs-forgotten-cancer-scandal/
Edit: I've actually seen this exact reaction with subcutaneous injections of tumor cells in mice.