TheHound
4 semanas hace
While we wait…Any new B-Petri dish papers published lately?
Petri dish studies, also known as in vitro experiments, often lead to false hope because they are conducted in highly controlled laboratory environments that do not fully replicate the complexity of living organisms. Here are the key reasons for this:
1. Oversimplified Conditions
In a Petri dish, cells are isolated and grown in artificial environments with carefully controlled nutrients, pH, and temperature. This does not mimic the intricate systems and interactions that occur in a living organism. A treatment that works on isolated cells may behave very differently in the body.
2. Lack of Systemic Factors
The body is a dynamic system with multiple interacting components, including the immune system, hormones, and metabolism. A treatment might show promise in a Petri dish but fail when introduced to the complexities of a whole organism.
3. Doses and Delivery
In in vitro studies, substances can be applied directly to cells at specific concentrations. In the body, reaching the target cells in the same way can be much more difficult due to issues with absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion.
4. Overextrapolation
Positive results in in vitro studies are sometimes overhyped in the media or even by researchers, leading to unrealistic expectations about how soon a discovery might lead to effective treatments for humans.
5. Lack of Whole-Body Toxicity Data
A compound might kill harmful cells in a Petri dish but could be toxic to normal cells or organs in a living organism. The safety profile often cannot be assessed until in vivo studies (in animals or humans) are conducted.
Example
Many cancer drugs have shown promise in killing tumor cells in a Petri dish but fail in clinical trials due to poor efficacy in the body or unacceptable side effects. Similarly, certain antioxidants or supplements that protect cells in in vitro studies have not demonstrated significant health benefits when tested in humans.
Conclusion
While Petri dish studies are valuable for initial insights and screening, they are only the first step in a long process of research. Their findings must be validated through animal studies, human trials, and real-world applications before they can lead to effective and safe treatments.
Universities publish a significant amount of research involving Petri dishes (in vitro studies) because these experiments are foundational to scientific inquiry and serve important purposes in advancing knowledge and innovation. Here’s why:
1. Early-Stage Discovery
• In vitro studies are often the first step in investigating new ideas, testing hypotheses, and identifying potential mechanisms in biology and medicine.
• They provide a cost-effective and controlled way to test theories before advancing to more complex and expensive animal or human studies.
2. Building a Knowledge Base
• Universities prioritize generating fundamental knowledge, even if it doesn’t immediately lead to clinical applications.
• Petri dish studies contribute valuable insights into how cells, molecules, and organisms work at a basic level.
3. Low-Risk and Ethical Feasibility
• Using Petri dishes avoids ethical and logistical complications involved in animal or human studies.
• Early-stage research involving living organisms requires more rigorous oversight and approval, making in vitro studies an accessible starting point.
4. Funding and Academic Metrics
• Grant agencies often fund exploratory research to develop preliminary data for larger projects. Petri dish studies are a common source of this early data.
• Academic researchers are often measured by their publication output, so publishing in vitro findings helps meet performance and funding expectations.
5. Proof of Concept
• Researchers use Petri dish experiments to show whether an idea has potential. These results can justify follow-up studies in animals or humans, securing further funding or collaboration.
• Journals often accept such studies because they are a crucial step in the pipeline of scientific discovery.
6. Incremental Nature of Science
• Science progresses in small, incremental steps. Petri dish studies often represent one of these steps in understanding complex biological phenomena.
• Even if a study doesn’t lead directly to a cure or breakthrough, it may provide a building block for future discoveries.
7. Ease of Reproducibility
• Petri dish studies are typically easier to replicate compared to animal or human studies, making them valuable for establishing reproducible science.
Challenges and Context
While universities publish a lot of Petri dish research, it is essential for scientists, journals, and the media to clearly communicate the limitations of such studies. Misrepresentation of preliminary findings as groundbreaking breakthroughs can lead to false hope, but this is not inherent to the research itself—it’s often a matter of how the results are presented or interpreted.
loanranger
4 semanas hace
IPIX has until 1/19 to respond to the Cummings brief filed on 11/12.
Unfortunately we don't get to see what these briefs say.
This is the last hard fact I've seen...from the original case:
"08/23/2024 ORDER: of Post Judgment Security
..II. ALTERNATIVE SECURITY
In accordance with General Laws c. 223, sec. 86A, Innovation shall obtain and provide within thirty (30) days of this Order a bond payment to Cummings with sureties to be approved by this Court conditioned to pay Cummings the amount of at least $1,375,811.36, within thirty (30) days of the date when execution may issue upon judgment, which bond shall be filed with the clerk after its approval by the Court."
Would be interesting to know if that was done....I thought the appeal was contingent on it.