Weird Medicine Healthcare for the Rest of Us

June 15, 2015

RexDart Update

Filed under: Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 2:39 pm

It is with great sadness that I report that our friend of many months, RexDart, AKA Jeff Zurio, succumbed to his metastatic cancer earlier in the month.  Fred from Brooklyn and I had kept in touch with him and when I last spoke with him he was in good spirits with good pain control.  He had friends in El Paso who were going to actually care for him so he wouldn’t be alone.   After that phone call, we lost all contact with Jeff.

One thing Jeff told me (many times, actually) was that the support, both financially and emotionally, from Weird Medicine, O&J and interrobang.com fans was the only thing that kept him going his last few months.   Thank you all for being such great, great people;  this shows that even a little effort by a lot of people can ease suffering and improve quality of life in people that we’ve never even met.  Amazing.

yr obt svt,

 

Steve

You Don’t Want to Miss This!

Filed under: Steve's Blog — dr steve @ 2:29 pm

Catch a Rising Star

 at

Ocean State Theatre

presents

Rob Bartlett & Tony Powell

Saturday, June 27 at 7:30pm
Tickets:

$42 – Standard Seating
$52 – Premium Seating

(*show contains adult language; 18+)


(comedian Rob Bartlett)

(comedian Tony Powell)
Rob started in stand-up comedy at Richard M. Dixon’s White House Inn, a talent showcase club on New York’s Long Island run by the presidential look-alike. He has headlined at the Sands Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Atlantic City’s Tropicana and Hilton Hotels, Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods Resort and Casino. On television, Rob has appeared as a stand up comedian on the “MTV Half Hour Comedy Hour,” “Standup Spotlight” on VH1 and on “Late Night with David Letterman” and “Conan O’Brien.”

In 1986, Rob became a regular in-studio guest of Don Imus at radio station WNBC 66AM. When the station was sold and the Imus in The Morning Program moved to the WFAN studios in Astoria, Rob became a contract player, and has since written and performed some of the show’s popular cast of characters. He has brought some of them, such as Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, Camilla Parker Bowles, former president Bill Clinton and Dr. Phil to the new Imus In the Morning set at MSNBC.

Rob’s television credits include starring roles on the Paramount/CBS comedy special “What’s Alan Watching?,” ABC’s “Move the Crowd,” and a recurring role on NBC as attorney Milton Schoenfeld on “Law & Order, Special Victims Unit.” Rob is very proud to have been voted one of the “Top Ten Worst” wrestling announcers in history for his short-lived stint at color commentator of the WWF Monday Night Raw. He is also the voice of Marty, the hyperactive dog, on the popular cartoon series “Kenny the Shark”.
 

 

Veteran stand-up comic/writer Tony Powell can be seen and heard weekday mornings on the nationally syndicated radio program “The Imus in the Morning Show” which is also simulcast on the Fox Business Channel on cable television and Direct TV.  His television appearances include USA Live on USA Networks, “A&E Comedy on the Road” and NBC’s “Showtime at the Apollo” to name a few.  Tony has appeared in several national commercials including Visa All Star Café with Andre Agassi, Ritz Crackers, Dawn Dishwashing Liquid, Fila, Heineken, and he was also the national radio spokesperson for both the Miller Genuine Draft and U.S. Army.  As a stand-up comedian Tony has worked as a warm-up for Bill Cosby and Nickelodeon’s “Keenan and Kel”.  He has performed in the nation’s premier comedy clubs. The Improv in Santa Monica, CA, The Ice House in Pasadena, CA,Charlie Goodnights in North Carolina, Gotham Comedy Club, The Comic Strip, Carolines, Dangerfields, all in New York City are just a few of the venues in which  Tony has shared his comedic gifts .  He’s opened for major recording artists such as O’Jays, Spinners, Whispers, The Jets, GQ and The Platters. He’s been a regular at The Cesear Pocono Resorts, The Tropicana and Taj Mahal in Atlantic City.

A Brooklyn native, Tony excelled academically and at the age of thirteen was accepted into the prestigious Choate Rosemary Hall boarding school. At sixteen he attended The University of Virginia where he earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in Rhetoric Communications.

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June 4, 2015

Incremental Advance in Immune Therapy for Melanoma

Filed under: Non-pseudoscience Cancer Cures — Tags: , , — dr steve @ 9:44 am

[Though not as striking as the abscopal effect stories that have come out recently in the context of metastatic melanoma, this story advances the notion that immune modulation is a viable approach to a generalizable treatment for cancer.   Although my hypothesis is that patient specific immune modulation (targeting the patient’s actual tumor markers and pointing the immune system in the right direction) will be the eventual answer, drug companies want to at least try to develop something general that they can sell.   We’ll see if this approach is just a stepping stone to a more complete general treatment or if they actually figure something out.  In the meantime, this is a very interesting bit of news. –dr steve]

(CNN)Researchers meeting in Chicago are hailing what they believe may be a potent new weapon in the fight against cancer: the body’s own immune system.

An international study found that a combination of two drugs that helped allow the immune system to fight the cancer — ipilimumab and nivolumab — stopped the deadly skin cancer melanoma from advancing for nearly a year in 58% of the cases.

Melanoma, though a skin cancer, can spread to the lungs, liver, bone, lymph nodes and brain.

Other studies have shown promise in treating lung cancer. The research is being presented in Chicago at the annual conference of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and published in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Those involved in the fight against cancer are divided as to just how excited to get over the promise of immunotherapy in battling cancer.

“Immunotherapy drugs have already revolutionized melanoma treatment, and now we’re seeing how they might be even more powerful when they’re combined,” said Dr. Steven O’Day, an expert with the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“But the results also warrant caution — the nivolumab and ipilimumab combination used in this study came with greater side effects, which might offset its benefits for some patients. Physicians and patients will need to weigh these considerations carefully,” O’Day said.

In the study, 36% of the patients receiving the two-drug combination had to stop the therapy due to side effects. Both drugs are made by Bristol-Myers Squibb, the sponsors of the study.

And Nell Barrie, a spokeswoman for Cancer Research UK, while calling the results “encouraging” and “promising,” told CNN that much remains to be learned and the new drugs would not replace any of the existing cancer treatments.

Surgery, she said, would remain vital. So, too, would chemotherapy and radiotherapy, she said.

She noted that researchers had yet to study the long-term survival rates for immunotherapy. And the side effects can include inflammation of the stomach and bowel serious enough to require hospitalization, she said.

But Dr. James Larkin, the lead author of the melanoma study, called the results a game changer.

“We’ve seen these drugs working in a wide range of cancers, and I think we are at the beginning of a new era in treating cancer,” Larkin told The Telegraph, a British newspaper.

Melanoma, though a skin cancer, can spread to the lungs, liver, bone, lymph nodes and brain.

 

Barrie said immunotherapy could offer hope to people with cancers that are otherwise difficult to treat, such as melanoma, advanced lung cancer or cancer that has spread throughout the body.

“We’re looking at another weapon in the arsenal,” she said.

At the heart of immunotherapy is that cancer — unlike most other diseases — is not an invader. It consists instead of the body’s own cells gone rogue.

So the immune system is not programmed to target the cancerous cells because it does not recognize them as foreign.

The immunotherapy drugs, Barrie said, “work to switch the immune system back on.”

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