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Thread: TCM and the Nobel Prize

  1. #1
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    TCM and the Nobel Prize

    This is an awesome angle on this story.



    How traditional Chinese medicine finally won its Nobel Prize
    When the drugs don't work. (Reuters/China Daily)
    Written by Akshat Rathi
    October 06, 2015 Quartz india

    The year’s most prestigious prize in medicine has been bestowed upon Youyou Tu, the lead discoverer of powerful malaria drug artemisinin. In giving her the prize, the Nobel Prize committee has recognized the role ancient knowledge can play in the modern world.

    But her extraordinary tale, which began during the Vietnam war, also shows traditional medicine’s limitations.

    In the war, the North Vietnamese were not just fighting American-supported forces but also failing to fight malaria. The parasite that caused the disease had developed resistance against chloroquine, which was commonly used as treatment. So, in desperation, they turned to China’s leader, Mao Zedong, for help.

    Mao’s answer was to make searching for a new malaria drug a military project. Soon, more than 500 scientists were involved. One group screened some 40,000 known chemicals to find a malaria drug. The other turned to traditional medicine literature and sent for finding “secret cures” in Chinese villages.

    Those looking at traditional medicine literature succeeded, but not easily. Tu described the challenge in 2011 in the journal Nature (paywall).

    We investigated more than 2,000 Chinese herb preparations and identified 640 hits that had possible antimalarial activities. More than 380 extracts obtained from 200 Chinese herbs were evaluated against a mouse model of malaria. However, progress was not smooth, and no significant results emerged easily.

    The first taste of success came when an ancient text revealed a method of using qinghao—the Chinese name for sweet wormwood—to extract artemisinin. After five years, in 1972, Tu had found a method to successfully extract the drug from the plant. But such were the days of China’s Cultural Revolution that clinical trials could not be performed.

    Tu’s team volunteered to be the first patients to deem the drug’s safety, and only then could they go out to do proper trials. But soon after, when the war in Vietnam ended, the project that found the drug was disbanded. Even though Tu had managed to publish her results widely by the 1980s, the development of the drug languished.

    It took nearly 30 years for the World Health Organization to endorse the drug. The reasons for the delays are not clear, but were perhaps caused by a combination of political instability, lack of patents that could spur pharma companies to invest in the development, and malaria afflicting mostly the poor.

    Though it took time, Tu’s method showed other Chinese researchers how to capitalize on the ancient knowledge hidden in scrolls and passed down through word of mouth. China’s success is extraordinary in the light of India’s failed efforts to turn its much-treasured traditional medicine into widely-useful therapies. While chemicals sourced from Chinese herbs such as huperzine A (treats memory dysfunction) and paeoniflorin (treats cardiovascular disease) have successfully undergone rigorous clinical trials and are set to find wider use soon, none of India’s Ayurvedic medicines have reached that stage.

    The plant- and animal-based treatments of traditional medicine contain hundreds of chemicals, which can vary hugely in their amounts from one batch to another. If it works, there is no understanding why it worked or whether it will work again. The rigor of clinical trials, which allows for development of replicable results, forces researchers to find the active ingredient from a natural source that shows the most promise. The story of artemisinin is one where Tu and her colleagues managed to marry the knowledge of Chinese traditional medicine with the rigors of modern medicine.

    Not all Chinese or Indian researchers agree that they need to conform to those rules, but the fact is that those strict rules have allowed the development of therapies that have more than doubled human life expectancy. So, instead of peddling pseudotherapies under the guise of traditional Chinese medicine or Ayurveda, researchers should take the hard route, like Tu did, and make ancient knowledge actually useful.
    Gene Ching
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    More on Tu Youyou

    What the 2015 Nobel Prizes mean for traditional Chinese medicine
    COMMENTARY by Marta Hanson OCTOBER 6, 2015, 9:48 AM EDT


    Tu Youyou, a pharmacologist with the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, working to make artemisinin, a drug therapy for malaria, in 1980s. China's Tu Youyou, Irish-born William Campbell, and Japan's Satoshi Omura jointly won the 2015 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, the Nobel Assembly at Sweden's Karolinska Institute announced on Monday. Tu won half of the prize for her discoveries concerning a novel therapy against malaria.
    Photograph by Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

    Scientisist Youyou Tu’s Nobel Prize is a sign that Western science has changed how it perceives alternative systems of medicine — but only slightly.

    I’m sure I’m not the only one surprised by the announcement that half of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has gone to a researcher who spent her entire career researching traditional Chinese medicine. Based at the Chinese Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Beijing (now the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences) since 1965, scientist Youyou Tu, her colleagues, and home institution may well be just as stunned today as I am.

    Being granted the Lasker Award is often a good predictor of Nobel Prize prospects. Tu received one in 2011 for her discovery of Artemisinin as an alternative malaria cure to the standard chloroquine, which was quickly losing ground in the 1960s due to increasingly drug-resistant parasites. Scientific research on the pharmaceutically active properties of traditional Chinese medicinals, however, has never been a predictor for such widespread international recognition.

    Traditional medical knowledge anywhere in the world has not even been on the radar for Nobel Prize prospects. Until now, that is. So how should we interpret this arguably seismic shift in international attention on traditional Chinese medicine?

    Discoveries to be made in historical record

    In the question-and-answer session after the announcement at the Karolinska Institute, which awards the Nobels, one of the panelists emphasized not just the quality of Tu’s scientific research, but also the value of recorded empirical experience in the past.

    The antifebrile effect of the Chinese herb Artemisia annua (qinghaosu 青蒿素), or sweet wormwood, was known 1,700 years ago, he noted. Tu was the first to extract the biologically active component of the herb — called Artemisinin — and clarify how it worked. The result was a paradigm shift in the medical field that allowed for Artemisinin to be both clinically studied and produced on a large scale.

    Tu has always maintained that she drew her inspiration from the medical text of a fourth-century Chinese physician and alchemist named Ge Hong 葛洪 (circa 283-343).

    His Emergency Formulas To Keep at Hand (Zhouhou beijifang 肘後備急方) can best be understood as a practical handbook of drug formulas for emergencies. It was a book light enough to keep “behind the elbow” (zhouhou), namely, in one’s sleeve, where Chinese men sometimes carried their belongings. We can discern from Ge’s astute description of his patients’ symptoms that people then suffered not only from malaria but also from other deadly diseases including smallpox, typhoid and dysentery.

    Beyond recording the fever-fighting qualities of Artemisia annua, Physician Ge also wrote about how Ephedra sinica (mahuang 麻黃) effectively treated respiratory problems and how arsenic sulphide (“red Realgar,” xionghuang 雄黃) helped control some dermatological problems.

    Traditional ingredients, modern drugs

    Just because a compound has natural roots and has long been used in traditional medicine is no reason to take it lightly.

    You might remember that in 2004, the FDA actually banned ephedra-containing dietary and performance-enhancing supplements. They’d been the cause not only of serious side effects but also several deaths. The ban remains in effect in the U.S. despite a court challenge from ephedra manufacturers. Related drug ephedrine, however, is used to treat low blood pressure and is a common ingredient in over-the-counter asthma medicines.

    As for Realgar, its toxicity was well-known in both ancient Greece and Chinese antiquity. In Chinese medical thought, though, skillfully administered toxins may also be powerful antidotes for other toxins. Realgar thus continues to be used in Chinese medicine as a drug that relieves toxicity and kills parasites. Applied topically, it treats scabies, ringworm and rashes on the skin’s surface; taken internally, it expels intestinal parasites, particularly roundworms.

    Although biomedicine does not currently use Realgar or its related mineral arsenicals in treatments, Chinese researchers have been studying their anticancer properties for some time now. In 2011, a Chinese researcher at Johns Hopkins University, Jun Liu (with other colleagues), also discovered that the Chinese medicinal plant Tripterygium wilfordii Hook F (lei gong teng 雷公藤 “Thunder God Vine”) is effective against cancer, arthritis and skin graft rejection.

    Tu’s groundbreaking work on artemisinin, in fact, can be seen as the tip of the iceberg of the extensive and global scientific study of pharmacologically active Chinese medicinals, including another successful antimalarial Dichroa febrifuga (changshan 常山) that has roots in the new scientific research on Chinese medicinals in 1940s mainland China.

    It was validation of this traditional drug as an antimalarial in the 1940s, in fact, that set the foundation for Chinese leader Mao Tse Tung’s directive two decades later in the late 1960s to find a cure for malaria. Indeed, Tu’s research is best understood within the complex politics and history of top-down support from the Chinese government of Chinese medicine in mainland China during the long durée of the 20th century, and not just in the Maoist period.

    Even outside mainland China, though, such research has yielded results. In the 1970s, for example, U.S. and Japanese researchers developed the statin drugs used to lower cholesterol from studying the mold Monascus purpureus that makes red yeast rice, well, “red.”

    Empirical evidence of the medical efficacy in the rich Chinese medical archive from centuries earlier similarly influenced the initial direction of this research.

    Medically bilingual

    So is this Nobel Prize for Tu’s discovery a signal that Western science has changed how it perceives alternative systems of medicine? Perhaps, but only slightly.

    One of the Karolinska Institute panelists acknowledged that there are many sources from which scientists draw inspiration to develop drugs. Among them, we should not ignore the long history of experiences from the past. As he clarified, such sources may be inspirational, but the old herbs found there cannot be used just as they are. Don’t underestimate the sophisticated methods Tu used to extract the active Artemisinin compound from Artemesia annua, another one of the panelists concluded.

    So the Nobel Prize is not only acknowledging this complete transformation of a Chinese herb through modern biomedical science into something powerfully efficacious, but also the millions of lives saved because of its successful application worldwide, particularly in the developing world.

    But there’s something else that marks Tu as extraordinary vis-à-vis both her two fellow Nobel Laureates for medicine, William C Campbell and Satoshi Ōmura, and her more Western medically oriented colleagues in pharmacology. She embodies, in both her history and her research, what I call medical bilingualism — the ability not only to read in two different medical languages but to understand their different histories, conceptual differences, and, most importantly for this unexpected news, potential value for therapeutic interventions in the present.

    This medical bilingualism is a quality that current researchers mining the same fine line between the empirical knowledge of traditional medical traditions and the highest level of modern biomedical science would be lucky to share with Nobel Laureate Youyou Tu.

    Marta Hanson is an associate professor of history of medicine at John Hopkins University. This article originally appeared on The Conversation.
    This is really a landmark achievement for TCM.
    Gene Ching
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    a rebuttal

    I was wondering if something like this was coming...

    No, this Nobel Prize is NOT for Traditional Chinese Medicine
    11 October 2015 08:00
    A. Jacobus
    9 min read

    China has a Nobel Prize in one of the sciences. Tu Youyou’s Nobel Prize for Medicine is wonderful for her and for the global fight against malaria, since Tu was instrumental in developing a viable drug against this terrible disease. The fact that she answered a call from Chairman Mao to become a medical researcher makes her story patriotic and China has broken a psychological barrier with this Nobel win, because China’s leaders have long been frustrated by the nation’s lack of Nobel laureates in the sciences. When Mo Yan won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2012, the country was celebrating already, but this is a vindication of China’s scientific progress, a more objective reason for nationalist pride.

    Nobody mentions the 2010 Nobel Prize for Peace, of course.

    According to Prime Minister Li Keqiang, Tu’s Nobel Prize ‘embodies the enormous contributions of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) to human health’. Tu isolated the active anti-malarial ingredients in the drugs that she developing in a plant called qinghao. Her inspiration to extract the antimalarial substance came from the plant’s mention in a 4th-century medical text, hence Prime Minister Li’s allusions to traditional medicine. In fact the Nobel committee explicitly honored Tu for her sophisticated extraction and development of the antimalarial ingredient, not her discovery of the qinghao plant itself. Her discovery was inspired by ancient writings but the consequential extraction and rigorous scientific testing have nothing to do with TCM. Most importantly, unlike the questionable therapeutic value of nearly all TCM, the antimalarial drugs Tu forged actually work.


    Mo Yan, winner of Nobel Peace Prize 2012. Photo: Wikicommons.

    Nevertheless, Li Keqiang’s allusions are dangerous. At best TCM does not work. At worst TCM does tremendous harm to people and animals. It would be very wrong if people think this Nobel Prize celebrates anything else except Tu’s extraordinary and laudable scientific research.

    In modern China, traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) does not have the air of hippies and sandals that alternative medicine in the west has had for a long time. There are those rural herbalists and folk healers that we associate with a less complicated life close to nature, but most of TCM has been institutionalized, incorporated into the government’s approved and state-run medical system. It has universities dedicated to the study of it. In pharmacies there is no clear difference between TCM medicine and drugs developed according to the scientific method. Indeed, doctors often do not tell their patients whether they are receiving TCM or ‘conventional’ medicine. Approximately 12 per cent of national health care services are provided by TCM facilities, but to muddy the waters further, these often also practice scientifically rigorous medicine. According to James Palmer, who made an extensive study of TCM in 2013, it is a 60 billion dollar industry in mainland China and Hong Kong.

    The theories behind TCM treatments are philosophical and not, even by the most relaxed standards, scientific. TCM is heavily influenced by Daoism (or Taoism) and, to a lesser extent, Confucianism. These philosophies, though not by definition harmful to the soul, are either disastrous or completely useless when applied to the body. Chinese philosophers have mostly viewed the human body as composed of the interaction of different elements, processes, and fluids: the elements of fire, water, earth, metal, and wood and their interconnectness with each other and the essences of yin, yang, and qi (the life force). Each of these comes with its own correspondences in the body. Indeed, the human body is a smaller mirror-image of the universe. The grand design of the cosmos and the miniature design of a person are in an eternal flow. That sounds great and one a philosophical level I find it greatly appealing. When it comes to medicine it is nothing but quackery.

    In TCM illnesses are a result of excesses that disrupt the balance between the elements, similar to the four humors of Greek philosophy that were influential in western medicine before the scientific revolution. In TCM the symbolism of the elements becomes, for the lack of any other words, naively materialistic. Illness is manifested in symptoms of wind, fire, cold, dampness, dryness, and heat and a herb that looks like the heart, the hand or the ***** can be used to treat ailments in those body parts respectively. Animals have powers that can be harnessed for use in TCM: the vitality of a tiger can be extracted from its bones; the strength of an ox from its gall stones; the qi of any animal can be found in its testicles and ***** or any body part that looks vaguely phallic, making aspects of TCM quite Freudian – and just as unfalsifiable. Moreover, many a Chinese man today can attest to how many stewed pig brains he had been fed as a schoolboy prior to taking the Chinese university entrance examinations, the SAT or the Cambridge Overseas School Certificate.


    Traditional Chinese medicine. Photo: Wikicommons.

    Despite a remarkable period of economic growth and scientific progress, TCM ideas suffuse Chinese popular thinking about health and, according to Palmer, there is a fierce defensiveness associated with them. He says that opposition to TCM makes a person stand out, even when the critic is inside Chinese culture. He wrote about several Chinese who were critical of TCM who found it difficult to be accepted socially and scholars who faced expulsion from teaching.

    Opposition to TCM within China has not always been so outlandish. During a brief period of engagement and openness to the outside world, in the twilight of the last imperial dynasty, it was common among even the most famous intellectuals. The Qing scholar Yu Yue published On Abolishing Chinese Medicine in 1890, after losing his wife and children to badly treated illness. Lu Xun, China’s greatest modern writer, trained as a Western doctor in Japan in reaction against what he called the ‘unwitting or deliberate charlatans’ of medicine in China. He had seen his father die and his family nearly bankrupted by increasingly rare herbal and animal part treatments. In 1919 he published the story ‘Medicine’ in which a family desperate for a cure is told they can find it in the blood of an executed rebel.
    continued next post
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    continued from previous


    Lu Xun. Photo: Wikicommons.

    On this wave of modernization and reinvigoration, the Nationalist government of the 1920s took a far greater interest in western-style public health. The movement harbored deep-rooted anger against the west for the humiliation of China, and a turnaround required letting go of the past and embrace those western ideas that would allow China to compete on a more equal basis. The Nationalists even tried to abolish TCM in 1929, but after a few years of struggle against conservative stalwarts they had to accept a resolution called ‘Equal treatment for Western and Chinese medicine.’ It still exists, in altered form, as the law of Taiwan.

    Chairman Mao, whose peasant forces replaced the Nationalists in 1949, dismissed TCM practitioners as ‘circus entertainers, snake-oil salesmen or street hawkers’, but it was the Communist government that coined the term TCM, founding the State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, and creating universities and research centers dedicated to the study and reform of it. There was a conscious effort to create an alternative, native theory, to make TCM ‘scientific in form’, so it could exist side by side with ‘Western medicine’, or even integrated into broader medical theory for the new, post-capitalist man. This integration into the Communist education apparatus allowed TCM to survive even the onslaught of the Cultural Revolution.

    One of the reasons for the enduring popularity of treatments that clearly do not work beyond the placebo effect and pure randomness, is the alternative. Unless you pay handsome bribes or pull strings, Chinese hospital treatment is a journey through several circles of Hell, those of bureaucracy, disorganized waiting, and competition for the doctors’ attention. In less developed areas the educational level and the knowledge of medical staff is rudimentary at best. There is a good possibility that going to the doctor in China will make you worse off, even if the doctor is not practicing TCM.


    Tu Youyou. Photo: Chinanews.com.

    However, there are many examples of TCM treatments that are objectively harmful when studied using the most basic of western methods of research. Palmer mentions two TCM medications in his 2013 article: Anshen Bunao Pian pills, used for treating insomnia, contain 55 times the Chinese mainland’s legal limit for mercury. Zheng Tian Wan, a popular migraine treatment, is packed with aconite, causing potentially fatal heart palpitations and kidney failure. In fact, more than 60 per cent of China’s TCM products are blocked from export, according to the World Federation of Chinese Medicine Societies, a government-approved industry group.

    The magical ingredients in TCM, if they are not harmful to humans when taking them, are definitely harmful for nature in the way they are extracted. No one is healed, but countless elephants, rhinos, tigers, pangolins, manta rays, and other endangered animals are lost.

    Sometimes there is hope and it can come from unexpected developments. The greatest blessing for wildlife protectors has not been harsher punishment for poachers, crackdowns on smugglers or extensive media campaigns by skeptical groups. It has been the introduction of Viagra to the Chinese market. Once the middle-aged or insecure Chinese man had medicine that actually worked, the need for many sorts of animal *****es vanished. Indeed, the price for seal *****es, a popular TCM remedy for erectile dysfunction, has fallen sharply.

    If Tu Youyou were to use her newfound fame and her position of symbolic power in China to unmask TCM for the dangers it represents, she would be my pick for another Nobel Prize in the future. Perhaps even a Peace Prize that the Beijing government will not have represented by an empty chair.
    Umm, good to know that seal *****es are cheaper now.
    Gene Ching
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    TCM has alot to offer but quality standards (GMP) are often lacking and the sponsors do nothing to correct deficiencies in quality and % of main ingredients per labelling mandates.
    My last pharma position involved work with artemisin but although the compound did not work out, there are still companies doing a great job in provoding the direction for drugs needed in the developing world. A good incentive for the company I worked for was Gates Foundation input with WHO in decreasing the incidence of malaria in Africa and Asia.

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    Tu Youyou at Nobel Lectures in Physiology or Medicine in Stockholm

    China is very proud of Tu Youyou, as well they should be. This is a tremendous breakthrough for the international face of TCM.

    Tu Youyou: Artemisinin, gift from traditional Chinese medicine to world
    Source: Xinhua | December 8, 2015, Tuesday | ONLINE EDITION


    China's Tu Youyou (2nd L) who won 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine attends a lecture in Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, capital of Sweden, Dec. 7, 2015.

    ARTEMISININ, the most effective drug that combat malaria today is "a gift from Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) to the world", said Tu Youyou, in her presentation at Nobel Lectures in Physiology or Medicine in Stockholm on Monday.

    In the half-hour-long lecture at Karolinska Institutet in central Stockholm with full participation of a thousand audience, Tu detailed a vivid story in the 1970s of how a group of Chinese researchers despite various challenges successfully developed a cure to treat malaria.

    Tu won 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her discoveries concerning a novel therapy against Malaria, artemisinin.

    Drawn from valuable research experiences in developing artemisinin, Tu believes "Chinese medicine and pharmacology are a great treasure-house", which "should be explored and raised to a higher level."

    "Since 'tasting hundred herbs by Shen Nong', China has accumulated substantial experience in clinical practice, integrated and summarized medical application of most nature resource over the last thousands of years through Chinese medicine," Tu said.

    "Adopting, exploring, developing and advancing these practices would allow us to discover more novel medicines beneficial to the world healthcare," Tu stressed.

    "The sun along the mountain bows; The Yellow River seawards flows; You will enjoy a grander sight; By climbing to a greater height!" Tu quoted a poem from China's Tang Dynasty in her speech.

    "Let's reach to a greater height to appreciate Chinese culture and find the beauty and treasure in the territory of traditional Chinese medicine!" She said.

    "I enjoyed it very much, it's fascinating story when she recalled how she went back to TCM and found this method that's so very important for mankind," Lars Heikensten of the Nobel Foundation told Xinhua, "it's truly enjoyable moment."

    Despite Tu presented in Chinese and had her English version in PPT on background screen, Jan Lindsten, emeritus professor and former Secretary-General of Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine, understood and enjoyed very well.

    "She made a very mature comparison between modern pharmacology and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), which I think is extremely important and well worth to pursue in future to find treasure from TCM in developing new drugs," Lindsten told Xinhua.

    "I am quite sure we will have future medicine comes from nature!" Birgitta Rigler, head of the Rehabilitation Clinic in Dandryd's Hospital in Stockholm, told Xinhua.

    "Chemical industry may be faster in developing new drugs, but perhaps nature-based things are more durable," she said.
    Gene Ching
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