| Literature DB >> 24278806 |
Abstract
In the fall of 1890, an athletic, self-possessed, and thoughtful 17-year-old girl, who had just returned from an adventurous trip to Alaska where she had hurt her hand in a trivial accident, went to see a young, innovative surgeon in his new practice in New York City. Barely out of Harvard Medical School, he was a rising star in New York surgical circles, and the young woman asked him for help with her poorly healing, swollen, and naggingly painful injury. This visit had a far-reaching effect on cancer research, American philanthropy, and the career of the young man, William Coley, MD (1862-1936, Figure 1). The patient, Elisabeth Dashiell, confidant and close friend of John D. Rockefeller, Jr, was diagnosed by Coley with a highly aggressive round cell sarcoma, and despite radical surgery and in spite of Coley's undoubtedly fine surgical skills and intensive care, a rapid progression of the cancer, immense suffering, and Elisabeth's death a few months later could not be prevented.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Coley; MBV; carcinoma; epidemiology; fever; leukemia; remission; sarcoma; tumor; vaccine; Ḋinfectious disease
Year: 2012 PMID: 24278806 PMCID: PMC3833486 DOI: 10.7453/gahmj.2012.1.1.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Adv Health Med ISSN: 2164-9561
Figure 1William Coley, circa 1888, at the start of his medical career.
Figure 2Signor Zola, who survived another 8 years after being treated by Coley in 1891.
Patients With Inoperable Cancer Treated With Mixed Bacterial Vaccine Alone Before 1940
| Type of Cancer | Total | Patients With Complete Tumor Remission Follow-up | No Tumor Response | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| > 20 y | 10-20 y | 5-10 y | < 5 yb | |||
| Soft tissue sarcomas | 84 | 17 | 12 | 11 | 12 | 32 |
| Lymphosarcomas (lymphomas) | 33 | 8 | 7 | 4 | 4 | 10 |
| Osteosarcoma | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Ewing's tumor/reticulum cell sarcoma | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ovarian carcinoma | 4 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
| Cervical carcinoma | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Testicular tumor | 14 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 5 |
| Renal tumor | 8 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
| Multiple myeloma | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Colorectal carcinoma | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Breast carcinoma | 13 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 6 | 5 |
| Melanoma | 6 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 2 |
Values indicate number of patients with or without tumor response, duration of follow-up with no indication of relapse.[17]
Or relapse within 5 years.
Survival of Patients Treated (1890-1960) With Mixed Bacterial Vaccine Matched With Patients From Surveillance Epidemiology End Results (SEER) Diagnosed in 1981
| Tumor Type | Median Survival, y | 10-y Survival Rate | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coley | SEER | Coley | SEER | |
| Kidney cancer | 6.5 | 5 | 33.3% | 23.1% |
| Ovarian cancer | 10 | 8 | 55.6% | 29.8% |
| Breast cancer | 5 | 7 | 25.0% | 38.1% |
| Soft-tissue sarcoma | 10 | 8 | 50.6% | 38.9% |
Matching criteria: site, stage, treatment status (ie, no radiotherapy), age, sex, ethnicity.[49]
Epidemiologic Studies (One Meta-analysis) Investigating the Association Between Infectious Diseases and Subsequent Cancer[51–88,a]
| Infectious Disease or Condition | Case/Control | Cancer Site | History of Infectious Diseases in Cancer Patients/Cancer Risk After Infectious Diseases | Year | Reference No. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Childhood disease, infectious diseases | 241/— | Gastrointestinal | No infectious disease as child in 180 patients, as child and as adult in 99 patients | 1910 | |
| Childhood disease, infectious diseases | 300/300 | Multiple | No infectious disease in 113 cancer patients vs 16 control patients | 1934 | |
| Childhood disease, infectious diseases | 232/2444 | Multiple | Fewer infectious diseases, especially childhood diseases | 1936 | |
| Tonsillectomy[ | 831/9990 | Upper aerodigestive tract | Fewer tonsillectomies | 1960 | |
| Tonsillectomy[ | 542/5020 | Upper aerodigestive tract | Fewer tonsillectomies | 1963 | |
| Mumps, measles, rubella | 97/97 | Ovarian | Less mumps and rubella | 1966 | |
| Mumps | 36/150 | Ovarian | No association | 1969 | |
| Typhoid fever | 5460[ | Multiple | Lower cancer mortality in survivors of typhoid fever 1945-1947 | 1970 | |
| Multiple (febrile disease, other diseases) | 150/150 | Multiple | Less fever (1% vs 13%), fewer doctor visits (15% vs 45%), less hospitalization (5% vs 12%) | 1970 | |
| Pneumonia, influenza | 399/395 | Ovarian | Less pneumonia and influenza | 1974 | |
| Tonsillectomy[ | 305/305 | Leukemia (in children) | Fewer tonsillectomies | 1975 | |
| Tonsillectomy[ | 752/752 | Leukemia | Fewer tonsillectomies | 1976 | |
| Mumps, measles, chicken pox, rubella | 300/600 | Ovarian | Fewer infections (reduced risk of ovarian cancer in history of infections: RR 0.47-0.86) | 1977 | |
| Tonsillectomy[ | 1415/1415 | Lung | Fewer tonsillectomies | 1978 | |
| Rubella, measles, mumps | 197/197 | Ovarian | Overall, no difference; more peripubertal rubella and measles (12-18 y), less during childhood years | 1979 | |
| Immunizations, infectious diseases | 33/99 | Rhabdomyosarcoma (in children) | Fewer immunizations, more preventable (with immunization) infectious diseases | 1982 | |
| Multiple, fever | 110/126 | Multiple | Less fever, fewer colds and organic infections | 1983 | |
| Measles | 252/230[ | Multiple | More tumors in people with no measles rash despite immunoglobulin G measles antibody | 1985 | |
| Multiple | 492/480 | Leukemia (in children) | Reduced risk of leukemia after serious infectious diseases: RR 0.6 | 1986 | |
| Common cold | 120/239 | Multiple | No association | 1986 | |
| Fever >3 days, herpes | 204/1353[ | Multiple | Reduced cancer risk after febrile diseases | 1987 | |
| Multiple | 255/485 | Multiple | Reduced cancer risk after cold/influenza (OR 0.18-0.23) or febrile abdominal influenza (OR 0.15-0.23) but not after childhood diseases | 1991 | |
| Childhood disease, febrile infectious diseases | 139/271 | Melanoma | Reduced risk of melanoma after chronic infectious diseases (OR 0.32), febrile abscesses, wound infections (OR 0.21), influence/cold (OR 0.32), trivial febrile diseases (OR 0.34). No association with childhood disease | 1992 | |
| Chicken pox, shingles | 462/443 | Glioma | Fewer chickenpox (OR 0.4) and shingles (OR 0.5) | 1997 | |
| Febrile childhood disease | 379/379 | Multiple | Reduced cancer risk after febrile childhood diseases (non–breast cancer OR 0.27, especially rubella, chicken pox) | 1998 | |
| Infectious diseases | Italian population | Multiple | Decreased mortality from infectious diseases (1895-1947) paralleled and followed by increased mortality from cancer (1895-1990) | 1998 | |
| Multiple (severe or less severe, fever) | 603/627 | Melanoma | Reduced risk of melanoma after febrile infections: tuberculosis (OR 0.16), Staphylococcus aureus (OR 0.54), sepsis (OR 0.23), flu (OR 0.65), pneumonia (OR 0.45); dose-response relationship | 1999 | |
| Infectious diseases | 1509/2493 | Glioma, meningioma | Reduced risk of glioma and meningioma after infectious diseases (RR 0.72 and 0.73) | 1999 | |
| Childhood disease, febrile infections | 111/109 | Multiple | Increased risk of cancer after mumps, whooping cough, decreased risk after cold | 2002 | |
| Childhood disease, ear infection | 538/504 | Neuroblastoma (children) | Reduced risk of neuroblastoma after childhood diseases (OR 0.60), increased risk after ear infections (OR 1.76) | 2004 | |
| Infections | 455/1031 | ALL (children) | More infectious episodes in leukemia than control patients (3.6 vs 3.1) | 2007 | |
| Infections | 162/2125 | Leukemia (children) | No association | 2008 | |
| Vaccination, childhood disease | 399/399 | Leukemia (children) | No association | 2008 | |
| Fever during infections, childhood disease | 355/244 | Multiple | Less mumps, rubella, chicken pox. Never fever in 83% of cancer vs 57% of control patients | 2009 | |
| Day-care attendance[ | 6108/19910[ | ALL (children) | Reduced risk for ALL (OR 0.76) after day-care attendance | 2010 | |
| Common infections, day-care attendance[ | 720/1494 | ALL, acute myeloblastic leukemia (children) | Reduced risk for ALL after repeated common infections (OR 0.7) and day-care attendance (OR 0.8) | 2010 | |
| Tonsillitis, tonsillectomy | 2988/[ | Hodgkin's lymphoma | Increased risk (RR 1.4) of lymphoma after tonsillitis | 2010 | |
| Common infections, day-care attendance[ | 669/977 | ALL (children) | Reduced risk of ALL after day-care attendance and ear infections | 2011 |
Abbreviations: ALL, acute lymphoblastic leukemia; OR, odds ratio; RR, relative risk.
Tonsillectomy as indicator for tonsillitis
Exposed to typhoid fever.
Negative vs positive history of measles.
Total patient group (prospective study).
Day care attendance as indicator for early exposure to various infectious diseases.
Studies on tonsillectomy only partly included.
Meta-analysis of 14 studies.
124 million person years.