{"id":16588,"date":"2019-06-20T16:34:15","date_gmt":"2019-06-20T20:34:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=16588"},"modified":"2022-12-07T11:12:25","modified_gmt":"2022-12-07T16:12:25","slug":"the-search-for-cancer-viruses-1966","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2019\/06\/20\/the-search-for-cancer-viruses-1966\/","title":{"rendered":"The Search for Cancer Viruses, 1966"},"content":{"rendered":"
Circulating Now welcomes guest blogger Robin Wolfe Scheffler, the Leo Marx Career Development Assistant Professor in the Program in Science, Technology, and Society at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In his research for his just-released book, <\/em>A Contagious Cause: The American Hunt for Cancer Viruses and the Rise of Molecular Medicine<\/a> (University of Chicago Press, 2019), he made extensive use of the collections of the National Library of Medicine. Today he uses that expertise to guide us through one of the films held by the Library on the \u201cSearch for Cancer Viruses<\/a>.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n The mid-twentieth century theory that there might be a viral cause of cancer was the latest iteration of the long running belief that cancer was contagious. In the early decades of the twentieth century, when the field of virology was not yet fully developed, this theory attracted widespread skepticism. Doctors pointed out that they did not catch cancer from their patients. Scientists such as Ludwik Gross, whose study of leukemia in mice played an important role in reviving the theory of viral carcinogenesis in the 1950s, were at first considered fringe figures for their conviction that a virus might transmit cancer from generation to generation. Gross, however, was deadly serious. Because mouse nursing studies from the 1930s suggested that a viral \u201cmilk factor\u201d could pass mammary tumors from mother to daughter, he considered raising his own infant daughter on formula in order to avoid the risk of intergenerational transfer of a possible human breast cancer virus. Following his findings and other advances in virology, by the 1960s the possibility that human cancer had viral causes seemed chillingly plausible.<\/p>\n A 1966 film by the U.S. Public Health Service, took the public inside The Search for Cancer Viruses<\/a><\/em>, showcasing the not only the difficulties associated with this search, but also the sense of hope that made it appear worthwhile. Scientists at the National Cancer Institute who appeared in the film, such as Sarah Stewart, whose work confirmed the existence of cancer viruses in mice and extended this work to other rodent species<\/a>, had initially been skeptical of human cancer viruses. In the late 1950s, Stewart turned away citizens writing to volunteer themselves for \u201cexperimental research\u201d to demonstrate similar connections in humans, cautioning that virus studies were \u201cnot yet ready for application to human beings.\u201d<\/p>\n Despite restraint from virologists, the opening of \u201cSearch for Cancer Viruses\u201d gives a sense of why the National Cancer Institute grew more willing to place scientific doubts aside and pursue the development of a leukemia vaccine. The film opens with a shot of a young girl, Sandra, riding her bike in a suburban neighborhood, revealing that she \u201cis a child apart. She has leukemia.\u201d We go with her into the hospital where the narrator raises the viral theory of leukemia and asks, \u201cbut can scientists prove that viruses are a cause of cancer?\u201d<\/p>\n Using Sandra to frame the search for a leukemia virus reflected the potent association of children, cancer, and vaccination in the aftermath of the polio vaccine campaigns of the 1950s. Both fundraisers and administrators at the National Cancer Institute realized that presenting cancer as a children\u2019s disease promoted far more urgency for cancer research than when it was framed as a disease which threatened adults. In particular, the opening of the film recalled a notorious cluster of potentially infectious leukemia reported among the children of the Chicago suburb of Niles, Illinois in 1961.<\/p>\n Following Sandra to the Roswell Park Memorial Institute outside of Buffalo, New York, the film stepped back to explain the challenges that that faced scientists when they sought to demonstrate that viruses caused cancer. The filmmakers highlighted new technologies that made viruses visible in the same way as bacteria had been studied in the laboratory, especially electron microscopy and ultracentrifugation.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n One of the challenges facing virology was that the immune system of experimental animals would often suppress viral activity. Sarah Stewart explained how she used infant mice, which have a very weak immune system, to demonstrate that viral infection could cause mouse leukemia following Koch\u2019s postulates<\/a>. However, the film assured its viewers, these methods could not be practiced in the case of experimentally proving the viral origins of human cancer\u2014infecting healthy humans with potential cancer viruses would be unethical.<\/p>\n Building infrastructure to allow numerous scientists to participate in cancer virus research was a vital element of the approach to the search for a cancer vaccine adopted by the National Cancer Institute\u2019s Special Virus Leukemia Program<\/a>. For researchers at smaller laboratories, isolating and cultivating candidate human cancer viruses was among the most expensive barriers to joining the search. James Grace, the director of Roswell Park and an advisor to the Program, collected and cultured samples of possible cancer viruses for further study and distribution. Grace led viewers through one of the facilities supported by the National Cancer Institute, emphasizing their ability to mass produce viruses and ship them safely to laboratories around the country in specialized biohazard containers.<\/p>\n<\/a>
National Library of Medicine MS C 504
Ludwik Gross Papers, box 3, folder 59<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/a>
National Library of Medicine MS C 360<\/em><\/a>
Sarah Stewart Papers, box 2, folder Correspondence S 1958<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n <\/a> <\/div> <\/div>
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