Daaru_ t1_j99rwsw wrote
Reply to comment by discretion in Pharmacological vitamin C inhibits mTOR signaling and tumor growth by degrading Rictor and inducing HMOX1 expression (Feb 2023) by basmwklz
It's like the plot of Dallas Buyers' Club, if any research suggests that something expensive is better then it will be used regardless of how efficacious it is. It's not black and white like a conspiracy and instead varying shades of grey. Vitamin C gave mixed results without toxicity instead of chemotherapy drugs giving mostly positive results with toxicity being a common side effect, so the latter is more medically sound for treating the issue for doctors. You learn pretty quickly that many doctors accept harmful side effects if the issue is treated at the expense of the patients.
rdizzy1223 t1_j9amn5n wrote
If I have cancer I will also gladly accept harmful side effects if the issue is treated, at the expense of myself. You'd have to be a dolt not to.
vipw t1_j9ecjbh wrote
In a palliative setting, it makes a lot of sense to use treatments with fewer side effects even if the effectiveness is worse.
The cytotoxic chemotherapy drugs have truly horrible side effects.
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