T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia was and is one of the most curable cancers, even before the advent of stem cell transplantation, up tp 80% of people had a good prognosis. There's a reason this therapy has been used in such a small number of people, it costs the GDP of a micro state so it's usually reserved for extremely complicated cases. The principle is roughly the same as the Berlin patient but the cells are your own edited cells rather than matched donors.
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For those on the trial, chemotherapy and bone marrow transplants had failed. Apart from the experimental medicine, the only option left was to make their death more comfortable.
And costs go down when you treat more people. There is considerable risk so it makes sense to only use it on patients when it's a choice of a more comfortable death or cure.
The revolutionary treatment three years ago involved wiping out her old immune system and growing a new one.
Wow, I'd never have thought something like that was possible.
Formerly incurable, that is.
I guess they’ll have to rename it now.
Are you sure? That would mean reprinting a lot of books..
Patient: What is the latest, doc?
Doctor: I have good news for you after the biopsy, you have aggressive and incurable blood cancer!
P: *confused and crying*
D: It is very curable!
Well, it mustn't have been incurable now, huh?
Checkmate, atheists.