] It's one thing to battle in the dark, believing the fight ] is roughly equal. Now, the genome age has shined a light ] on what was once an elusive enemy. Finally, we can see ] the armies massed against us, a foe of almost ] impenetrable diversity, and virtually anyone would agree ] that it doesn't look good. Yet strangely, now that the ] battle has been joined, cancer researchers have grown ] almost euphoric. The National Cancer Institute is boldly ] promising, if not a cure, at least "the elimination of ] suffering and death due to cancer" by 2015; of more than ] 20 researchers I spoke with, all believed that the next ] decade would bring a revolution in cancer medicine. ] ] At the root of this newfound optimism lie the very ] developments that revealed cancer's true nature in the ] first place: the sequencing of the human genome and the ] associated proliferation of new technologies - ranging ] from DNA chips to high-throughput gene-knockout ] techniques like RNA interference. (See "5 New Tools for ] Fighting Cancer," page 104.) Armed with these new ] weapons, researchers have begun an engagement that will ] more closely resemble the hunt for elusive al Qaeda ] operatives than a monolithic Cold War standoff. An interesting look at where some cancer research is heading now that the Human Genome is available. Wired 11.08: The End of Cancer (As we Know it) |