"Our hope is that this could be a cure. Our pre-clinical tests have been exceptionally successful. If this is half as effective in humans as it is in mice it could be that half of patients could be cured or at least given one to two years extra of high quality life."
REPORTER'S NOTE: After losing a sister to breast cancer in 1999, I have been praying for a medical breakthrough in cancer research. Should this news be God's answer, I know I'll be on my knees thanking Him! –Teresa Neumann, BCN.
A report in the New Scientist, detailing the work of Dr. Zheng Cui of Wake Forest University School of Medicine, indicates that within two years injections of immune cells from other people could cure those with cancer.
Dr Cui said: "Our hope is that this could be a cure. Our pre-clinical tests have been exceptionally successful. If this is half as effective in humans as it is in mice it could be that half of patients could be cured or at least given one to two years extra of high quality life. The technology needed to do this already exists, so if it works in humans we could save a lot of lives, and we could be doing so within two years." (Graphic: Telegraph UK)
Read more of this thrilling news, including how a single dose of immune cells appeared to give many of the study mice resistance to cancer for the rest of their lives, follow the link provided.
