mRNA Is Here Forever

This is NOT a Covid article.  It’s about mRNA.  “They” have ginormous plans for mRNA technology.  Eventually it will be used to treat everything except death.  Eventually it will even replace Ex-lax. “Can’t take a shit?  Get an mRNA shot!!”. That’s some mind-boggling shit, Maynard.  The article ends with a commentary that the only thing now holding back all this healthy and safe progress is “bravery“.  In other words, it’s all you chicken-shit anti-vax cowards who are keeping millions of people from living healthy productive lives!! I’ve had the shot plus 4 boosters, and I never felt better. So, grow some balls, take the shot, or just get the fuck out of Dodge.

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How mRNA vaccines could target everything from cancer to the plague

 

Imagine visiting your doctor for a routine checkup, and on top of the usual shots — the annual flu or COVID vaccine—your doctor asks if you’d like to be vaccinated for cancer. All cancer— lung, skin, colon, you name it — with just one mildly uncomfortable jab in the arm.

That scenario, which sounds like something out of science fiction, might be closer than you think. And it’s mostly thanks to the COVID vaccine – which in a few short years has become the highest-profile of the increasingly influential family known as mRNA vaccines.

Indeed, mRNA vaccines designed to treat cancer (among other diseases) “are quite realistic,” says Anna Blakney, an RNA researcher at the University of British Columbia.

And cancer is just the tip of the iceberg. Earlier this month, scientists Edo Kon and and Dan Peer from Tel Aviv University and the Israel Institute for Biological Research announced that they’d created a single dose vaccine that could effectively protect people from Yersinia pestis bacterium. Haven’t heard of it? That’s because it’s better known (at least in the Middle Ages) as the plague — a disease that still kills thousands in Asia and parts of Africa each year.

Anna Blakney, an RNA researcher at the University of British Columbia, says we are currently in the midst of an "mRNA renaissance."

.Anna Blakney, an RNA researcher at the University of British Columbia, says we are currently in the midst of an “mRNA renaissance.”.

The plague might not be something that keeps you up at night, but there are likely plenty of infectious diseases that do, and somewhere in the world, scientists are working (and getting amazingly close) to developing mRNA-based vaccines that could potentially make the disease you fear the most obsolete.

Blakney describes it as a RNAissance. ”Scientists are exploring the use of mRNA for many different applications,” she says, not just in treating cancer and COVID but “enzyme replacement therapies, immunotherapies, you name it.” These medicines “will be game changers in the years to come,” she says.

It may seem like these advances have arrived staggeringly fast, but researchers have been experimenting with mRNA treatments for decades. “Scientists first started studying mRNA vaccines in 1990,” says Blakney. “The first RNA vaccine clinical trial was started in 2009.”

Dan Peer, a scientist at Tel Aviv University, is part of a team that developed a new mRNA-based vaccine that could help prevent plague.

.Dan Peer, a scientist at Tel Aviv University, is part of a team that developed a new mRNA-based vaccine that could help prevent plague..

But then came the pandemic, and its urgency meant “bureaucratic red tape was reduced,” says Keith Knutson, a professor of immunology at the Mayo Clinic who researches and develops cancer vaccines. “It resulted in critical re-evaluation of some of the rules, regulations, and procedures that guide drug development.”

We’re not talking about the types of regulatory mechanisms that protect the consumer from unsafe drugs, but rules around “how we get things done,” he says. “It forced us to do things better and more efficiently.” Adds Knutson, a specialist in ovarian and breast cancer immunotherapies, “the pandemic pushed RNA from an emerging star to a superstar.”

Although best known as a disease responsible for killing millions during the Middle Ages, plague still causes large number of deaths across the globe each year.

.Although best known as a disease responsible for killing millions during the Middle Ages, plague still causes large number of deaths across the globe each year..

So how do mRNA vaccines work? Katalin Karikó, the Penn Medicine-scientist whose research laid the foundation for both the Pfizer and Moderna COVID vaccines, calls it a “middleman between information and action.” Unlike most vaccines, which inject part of a virus into the patient, mRNA gives our cells instructions on how to make the necessary protein (or antibodies) to fight off infectious agents.

“The technology could potentially target any abnormal protein” that leads to diseasesays Lennard Lee, an oncologist at the University of Oxford. “We should move forwards and push the boundaries.”

Oxford University Professor Leonard Lee says mRNA-based vaccines could potentially target any disease-causing protein.

.Oxford University Professor Leonard Lee says mRNA-based vaccines could potentially target any disease-causing protein..

Those boundaries are now being pushed in almost every type of deadly disease, from tuberculosis and malaria to high cholesterol and HIV. Promising advances are also being made for a universal flu vaccine, one that could protect against multiple strains of seasonal flu.

In the past, the effectiveness of flu vaccines varied from year to year — they were 39% effective in 2019-2020, but just 10% effective during the 2004-2005 flu season, according to CDC data. But a new vaccine being developed by University of Pennsylvania researchers “could include twenty strains of flu in a single mRNA vaccine,” says Blakney.

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Several mRNA vaccines are in the works that will tackle everything from ovarian, colorectal, lung and pancreatic cancers. Vaccines are even being developed for diseases that aren’t threatening humans — yet.

Prof. Katalin Karikó from the University of Pennsylvania was part of the team whose mRNA research helped lead to covid vaccine development by Pfizer and Moderna.

.Prof. Katalin Karikó from the University of Pennsylvania was part of the team whose mRNA research helped lead to covid vaccine development by Pfizer and Moderna..

Manufacturers like Moderna, GSK and CSL Seqirus are currently working on a precautionary measure vaccine, for a new strain of avian flu called H5N1, which has killed millions of animals (including mammals like foes, raccoons and bears) but remains very rare, and almost never deadly, among people. At least for now.

The big one, of course, remains cancer. In fact, years before COVID became public enemy number one, the primary focus of mRNA researchers was creating a vaccine to treat cancer.

COVID was in many ways easier because it was more straightforward. “The protein target is clear and distinct from any of the proteins on a human cell,” explains Blakney. “For cancer vaccines, we’re targeting human cells that may or may not have completely distinct proteins, or the proteins may be found on other tissues, so it’s important and sometimes challenging to make sure they’re very specific to only the cancer cells.”

 

Dr. Nora Disis, director of ​​the University of Washington’s Cancer Vaccine Institute, suggests diseases now considered "death sentences" will soon be preventable via vaccines.

.Dr. Nora Disis, director of ​​the University of Washington’s Cancer Vaccine Institute, suggests diseases now considered “death sentences” will soon be preventable via vaccines..

In other words, with COVID, they were aiming for a clear bullseye. For cancer, every target is different—“because every person’s cancers are different,” says Blakney—and the bullseye changes from patient to patient, and never looks quite the same.

But while cancer is a very different enemy than COVID, the lessons learned from the creation of COVID vaccines have served as a sort of canary in the coal mine for the entire arena of mRNA vaccine research. And the lighting speed in which COVID vaccines were introduced could soon seem like a turtle’s pace compared to what’s coming next.

Just last month, the FDA granted breakthrough therapy designation to a new experimental vaccine for advanced stage melanoma, the result of a collaboration between pharmaceutical companies Moderna and Merck. In clinical trials—which lasted for a year and involved 157 patients—the risk of dying from cancer dropped by as much as 44%. Phase 3 trials, with an even larger group of cancer patients, is planned for this year. A vaccine for skin cancer may not just become a reality in our lifetimes, but it could be just around the corner.

.During the covid crisis, research that might have once taken a decade instead barely required 18 months to find an effective vaccine. The urgent need for a treatment — and millions of both test-patients and end-users — helped make this rapid-fire research possible..

Knutson, the Mayo Clinic professor, is also currently overseeing five different clinical trials testing different vaccines for breast or ovarian cancer—vaccines that don’t just prevent cancer but also stop it from recurring. Although the data remains preliminary, he’s cautiously optimistic about their potential. Some treatments, he says, “are closer than others in becoming a reality.” And that’s mostly because cancer is so frustratingly diverse.

“Breast cancer for example, is subdivided into smaller subtypes,” he says. “It’s different in many ways from lung cancer or ovarian cancer. They all have different antigens.” If they manage to find the winning formula for a breast cancer vaccine, that doesn’t mean cancer patients everywhere should rejoice.

“A one-size-fits-all vaccine is likely not possible,” Knutson says.

At the vaulted Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, researchers are working on numerous vaccine clinical trials, including breast and ovarian cancer -- all rooted in mRNA technology.

.At the vaulted Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, researchers are working on numerous vaccine clinical trials, including breast and ovarian cancer — all rooted in mRNA technology..

But if we need more vaccines that target more cancers, that just means we have to speed up trials and continue the pace that started with COVID, says Lee. And even more than that, we need more cooperation like the type that helped advance the COVID vaccine so rapidly.

“Research requires hospitals to work together,” he says. This is exactly what’s happening in the U.K., with the January announcement of a Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad, in which the National Health Service has joined forces with BioNTech—the German firm that worked with Pfizer to manufacture the COVID vaccine—to fast-track cancer vaccines.

The rapid-fire approval of covid vaccines by Pfizer and other pharmaceutical giants has led to a fast-tracking of subsequent mRNA-based medical preventions.

.The rapid-fire approval of covid vaccines by Pfizer and other pharmaceutical giants has led to a fast-tracking of subsequent mRNA-based medical preventions..

“It aims to rapidly identify large numbers of patients who could be eligible for cancer vaccine trials,” Lee says. “It will explore potential vaccines across multiple types of cancer and could start as early as autumn 2023, with up to 10,000 treatments being delivered.”

That’s a big difference from what Lee calls “old-school, pre-pandemic clinical trials,” which typically took a decade or more to complete. “The NHS-Galleri study [in 2022] recruited 140,000 to test a revolutionary new blood test for cancer. This was achieved in less than a year,” Lee says. In the case of COVID, “the Oxford-Astrazeneca vaccine trials (of 2020) recruited 30,000 in less than a year. This is different from the hospital-by-hospital approach taken in the US.”

Ultimately, drugs enter the marketplace based on the speed of clinical trials, and Lee insists that it’s entirely in our control. “How many hospitals volunteer to run cancer vaccine trials, how many doctors/nurses will support the studies and how many patients will come forward?” he says. “I feel positive that there is strong grass-root support to get these new products tested rapidly.”

German firm BioNTech, Pfizer's partner on their Covid vaccine, is now part of the global Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad, which is developing mRNA-based vaccines for cancers at a rapid pace.

.German firm BioNTech, Pfizer’s partner on their Covid vaccine, is now part of the global Cancer Vaccine Launch Pad, which is developing mRNA-based vaccines for cancers at a rapid pace..

Just over a year ago, the BBC was wondering if mRNA vaccines could make us “superhuman.” We likely won’t get to that point, says Nora Disis, director of ​​the University of Washington’s Cancer Vaccine Institute. But, she adds, “I don’t think we need ‘superhuman’ immunity, just good strong immunity.

There are vaccines being developed for opioid addiction, to prevent smoking, to treat Alzheimer’s, autoimmune disease, and many others.” There will come a time, perhaps sooner than expected, when many diseases that are essentially a death sentence today “can be treated and prevented with vaccines,” Disis adds.

The key will be maintaining this momentum. “The pandemic took humanity to the brink and we had to innovate to survive,” Lee says. “We were lucky and developed a tool that saved tens of millions of lives. The only thing holding us back from using the same tool to save many more is just . . . bravery.”

"Big-Pharma" companies like Moderna are currently working on a precautionary measure vaccine for a new strain of avian flu which could one day spread to humans.

.“Big-Pharma” companies like Moderna are currently working on a precautionary measure vaccine for a new strain of avian flu which could one day spread to humans..

We need to be brave enough to collectively leap again with more clinical trials into more diseases, he says. “The legacy of the pandemic is that we don’t say, ‘Let’s wait another decade’ to complete research. We say, ‘Let’s act to hyper-accelerate this research field across the world.’ ”

Of course, no one knows for sure when — or even if — this will truly happen. But with the rapid pace of mRNA vaccines increasingly becoming the standard, we could very well live to see a day when we roll up our sleeves for a cancer vaccine, and it becomes one less thing we have to worry about.

SOURCE: NY (com)Post

THE END

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Author: Stucky

I'm right, you're wrong. Deal with it.

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45 Comments
AKJOHN
AKJOHN
March 29, 2023 7:41 pm

They have lots of things planned, and I assure you none of them are good. I will not comply one iota.

BabbleOn
BabbleOn
  AKJOHN
March 29, 2023 8:22 pm

Everyone is starting to be treated like they are nothing more than a line of corrupted computer code. That anything that is or goes wrong is simply bad/poor/corrupted original engineering that was passed on to us from our parents. Any transgression, regression, injury, susceptibility of the original DNA or personal wrong think , is viewed as a human coding virus. To be corrected by a Software mRna code. This code to correct flaws or behaviors is of course provided as an inescapable improvement. The Metaverse is already here and you are in it.

BabbleOn
BabbleOn
  BabbleOn
March 29, 2023 8:42 pm

it is a
Coded
Original
Virus
In
Dos

and you are viewed as the
1-Artificial
9-Intelligence
that needs to have a software update.

Euddie
Euddie
  BabbleOn
March 29, 2023 11:33 pm
Ze bugs
Ze bugs
  BabbleOn
March 30, 2023 1:44 am

Invert Covid and it’s DIVOC. Look up what that entails on a third party search engine.

aka.attrition
aka.attrition
  BabbleOn
March 30, 2023 3:55 am

Makes no sense. DOS stands for Disk Operating System. It is not a coding/programming language but an application to manage a computer, very old computers e.g. 80s PCs.

BabbleOn
BabbleOn
  aka.attrition
March 30, 2023 8:35 am

Yea I couldn’t think of what to use for the d. Any suggestions? and not a cucumber.. I was thinking Dna

Euddolen ap Afallach
Euddolen ap Afallach
  BabbleOn
March 30, 2023 3:42 pm

Yea I couldn’t think of what to use for the d

Hmm..

Certified
Official
Vaccine
Induced
Death

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  AKJOHN
March 30, 2023 5:06 am

…Knowingly or willingly, perhaps. All we can do is all we can do in our own strength.

falconflight
falconflight
March 29, 2023 7:52 pm

That Israeli org claim has long since been debunked.

Rife
Rife
March 29, 2023 7:55 pm

But can they cure stupidity?

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
March 29, 2023 7:58 pm

Anna Blakney, the mRMA researcher looks like she is 12. WTF? We have children doing Frankenstein research.

Oxford University Professor Leonard Lee
Prof. Katalin Karikó
Dr. Nora Disis

Look closely at their pics. Paging Hardscrabble Farmer. I will never argue with him about physiognomy again.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  Mary Christine
March 29, 2023 8:27 pm

HSF is not 100% wrong about phyzz.

(Maybe just 50-55%)

Paleocon
Paleocon
March 29, 2023 8:21 pm

Never going to take an mRNA shot.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Paleocon
March 29, 2023 8:42 pm

They’re feeding it to us – in food. And maybe through chemplanes, municipal water, who knows. They’re not gonna stop depopping until we kill them.

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Paleocon
March 30, 2023 12:47 am

mRNA suppositories are going to be the next big thing. Trust Auntie on this, Pal.

Euddolen ap Afallach
Euddolen ap Afallach
  Aunt Acid
March 30, 2023 3:59 pm

.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
March 29, 2023 8:55 pm

This will require a grand culling to fully address.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 29, 2023 9:14 pm

Future uses of genetic altering therapy is probably a great thing but daily use in a medical setting is definitely not ready for prime time .
Your intro claims you are all vaxxed and boosted and you feel fine !
I’m happy for you and wish you well in the future . Facts being what they are , perhaps if you were struggling to walk or breath, maybe swallow food thanks to GBS while fighting constant blood clots you would not be so boastful!
In my years I have had a series of medical issues due to an inherited kidney disorder and am alive today thanks to an organ transplant !
mRNA vaccine most likely would have killed me FACT !
We do not live in a one size fits all medical care world because every patient is different .
To bad the CDC , NIH , WHO and most governments knew this and did not give a shit and the body count proves that

ramAustralia
ramAustralia
March 29, 2023 9:20 pm

mRNA modifies ones DNA and so one becomes someone else, quite possibly not human at all. It is a powerful technology, no doubt, but like atomic power is deadly dangerous to mess with. There are safer ways of getting desirable results.

Tex
Tex
March 29, 2023 9:32 pm

Does that stuff hop on “you”? That is what “concerned” me being non jab and an asshole about it but around peeps that had accepted the jab both customers and staff. Should have sued the workplace , eh? , although “warning” signs were present, wear a mask, wash hands frequently etc. I was concerned opening a box of Chinese goods for stocking something would crawl on me and I would be INFECTED.

Daddy Joe
Daddy Joe
March 29, 2023 10:24 pm

Too late. Folks with working brains will never trust established medicine again. I’ll take my chances with good old natural cancer.

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
  Daddy Joe
March 30, 2023 12:49 am

Ladies and gentlemen, the smoking lamp is lit.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Aunt Acid
March 30, 2023 5:09 am

Pack a day + the “especiales”. Smokin lamp is ALWAYS lit. Hell. I might even break out the old Dr. Graybow!

Ze bugs
Ze bugs
  Daddy Joe
March 30, 2023 1:46 am

Cancer is caused by parasites. Get yourself some ivermectin.

bigfoot
bigfoot
March 30, 2023 12:32 am

Of course no one talks about why cancer is so prevalent these days in the first place. Processed “food” might be a good place to begin an investigation. But wait, the correlation has been documented thousands of times already in study after study. But wait, modern medicine to the rescue for all of us with addictions to pies, cakes, ice cream, pastries, seed oils, fast-fooders, fillers, preservatives, prescriptions, cell phones, and teevee couches. Three hurrahs for the doctors and pharma!

Aunt Acid
Aunt Acid
March 30, 2023 12:44 am

This Medikil nano-bot shot buziness is the plague.

Ze bugs
Ze bugs
March 30, 2023 1:42 am

The human genome has been hijacked by the worst people to ever infest this earth. They plan to use it to turn themselves into Immortal vampires and to enslave/program you to their liking.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Ze bugs
March 30, 2023 5:12 am

“Good” people would never think of putzing around with God’s Design. We don’t even have to question the morality of those people. It is a known quality, and it ain’t “good”.

Matthew Clark
Matthew Clark
March 30, 2023 4:03 am

A very poor article due to it’s lack of critical thinking. The Mrna vaccines were hardly successful. They neither stopped the prevention, or contagion of the disease. There is even data to suggest that repeated boosters weakened the immune system. What this article really wanted to advocate, in my opinion, was the reduction of testing, and trials , for future Mrna vaccines. That must not happen. One disturbing fact about vaccines is that since their proliferation the health of the general public is weaker. There is not conclusive proof (yet) that vaccines are responsible for this health development, but that could be because there is no meaningful medical investigation into why health in modern societies is deteriorating. Big Pharma, and the medical community in general, needs to come under more scrutiny, not less!

Perfect Stranger
Perfect Stranger
  Matthew Clark
March 30, 2023 8:05 am

Nah, it makes sense. The headline is correct.

You can’t get the plague or cancer if you are dead. Roll up that sleeve.

mike rafone
mike rafone
March 30, 2023 4:22 am

garbageass article

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
March 30, 2023 5:05 am

mRNA Is Here Forever

Uranium has been here forever. It wasn’t a problem until we started fucking around with it. NOW look where we’re at!

There’s A REASON GOD put us in a GARDEN when He Created us, and not in a city!

We came up with that shit all on our own…AFTER we pissed Him off.

VOWG
VOWG
March 30, 2023 6:33 am

So, the shit hasn’t worked on anything since day one yet we are supposed to believe the crap that is being spread about it.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  VOWG
March 30, 2023 6:59 am

That’s the beauty of life bro. We all get to choose our own shit sandwich.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  The Central Scrutinizer
March 30, 2023 9:13 am

We all get to choose our own shit sandwich.

You’ll get to choose nothing and be happy about it. These asswipes are going to sneak this shit into everything, and they’ll poison wildlife too so even those of us able to forage from nature will get poisoned.

So disappointed the zombie apocalypse didn’t materialize. Now we have to wait for these parasites to collapse the social order before we can do a little cleansing ourselves. I just hate waiting around

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  anon a moos
March 30, 2023 3:26 pm

I simply don’t accept that outcome. There’s always another way.

VOWG
VOWG
March 30, 2023 6:36 am

You got 10 years as a lab rat, maybe less. Enjoy.

Mel
Mel
March 30, 2023 11:35 am

Whew! That’s a relief.
Good to know that all the injuries, disabilities and deaths are for a good cause.

TLate
TLate
March 30, 2023 2:28 pm

You will be assimilated! Resistance is futile. Soon you will go to the doctor for an ailment, and you will be given a shot to help you and only be told after the fact it was an mRNA type medicine. SOC is becoming a pill and/or a shot for almost everything so it will be difficult to avoid mRNA if you go to the doctor regularly. Every time I went, they pushed Covid vax but I said no.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
March 30, 2023 3:00 pm

Wow … what a great infomercial … truly wonderful — but where’s the movie?

Seriously … this author somehow seems to totally overlook — or selectively forget — all of the pre-jab trials for numerous conditions involving animals in which ALL of the research animals died.

The FauciFlu jabs gave BigPharma the billions of guinea pigs for their technology that they’d otherwise never have given the pre-FauciFlu requirements under the Nuremberg Laws for informed consent to prevent medical experimentation on people.

So — just who is Eric Spitznagel, anyway? I found nothing particularly revealing via the search engine …

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 30, 2023 4:02 pm

Entire article has not ONE mention of “side effect” or “unforeseen”.

“The pandemic took humanity to the brink and we had to innovate to survive,”

Utter fucking bullshit.

ken31
ken31
March 30, 2023 7:28 pm

We spent some time on this subject in Topics in Cell Biology, before the holocough, but nobody was calling them vaccines before they launched their injectable bioweapons. It is really outrageous to call mRNA therapies “vaccines”.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 30, 2023 8:04 pm

Well they should have enough test subjects for testing out the cancer mRNA vaccines on. The Covid mRNA jab provided that.