Following the discovery, the Mount Sinai oncology board met with the scientists, who shared their finding. And something interesting happened: the board agreed that finding had potential. Although Stephanie will continue to be treated with traditional therapies, if and when they fail — as they often do with advanced cancer patients — the scientists at Mount Sinai are poised to begin experimental treatment using its fruit fly findings.
The meeting, and its outcome, marks an important milestone for personalized medicine: the potential for more, and personalized, alternative treatments when traditional ones fail.
And while personalized medicine won’t save all cancer patients, it holds significant promise, and is the one thing that could provide hope to the sickest patients.
As Stephanie told Warren after meeting with the Mount Sinai team: “I think I’m going to live.”
The statement marks a markedly different outlook than available to most stage 4 cancer patients, and one that hopefully will become more common if personalized medicine continues to receive support, both through funding and clinician openness to its promise.