Viruses and Cancer, 1962: What They Knew
Medicine's Goal: Cause and Cure of Cancer. Some Say Virus Starts Trouble; Some,
Hormones, by Earl Ubell. New York Herald Tribune 1958 July 13.
NY Herald Tribune
1958 / tobacco document
Application for research grant to the Tobacco Industry Research Committee (Kotin,
Jacobson, and Reimann), by Christopher M. Martin, Oct. 6, 1959. Project or subject:
Interactions of viruses, carcinogens, and nucleic acids.
Martin -
TIRC 1959 / tobacco document
TIRC review of lung carcinogenesis literature, Oct. 1, 1959. Lists 20 viruses
causing tumors in 9 species of animals, and the years of publication dating
back to 1898.
TIRC
review, 1959 / tobacco document
Show virus cancer link. Research workers of Seton Hall team give report. Staff
correspondent, Newark News 1961 June 29; and: Virus Link to Cancer. Science
News Letter July 3, 1961. Re Christopher Martin et al. "Viruses have been
shown to bind together cancer-causing materials in test tubes. Researchers believe
viruses serve as carriers of the cancer agents, Faye Marley reports."
http://tobaccodocuments.org/atc/60260159.html#images
'Piggy-Back' Viruses Held Possible Cancer Cause, by Alton Blakeslee, Associated
Press. Tucson Citizen 1961 June 29. In: News Reports and Comment, The Tobacco
Institute Inc., 1961 August. Re Martin et al.
Tucson
Citizen 1961 / tobacco document
Common human viruses as carcinogen vectors. CM Martin, S Magnusson, PJ Goscienski,
GF Hansen. Science 1961 Dec. 25;134:1985-1986. "It has been a continuing
paradox in the field of experimental neoplasias that carcinogens strongly implicated
in human tumorigenesis, though present in the human environment in only trace
amounts, will ordinarily induce neoplasia in animals only when administered
in relatively large amounts, or when given together with various chemical or
physical 'co-carcinogens'... This report presents evidence of in vitro and in
vivo interactions between common human viruses and chemical carcinogens; the
results suggest a hypothesis that viruses may serve as natural vectors for the
transport of otherwise innocuous amounts of environmental carcinogens (mutagens)
to susceptible intracellular chromosomal loci."
Martin
- Science 1961 / tobacco document
Human adenovirus type 12, 1962
In 1962, the discovery that human adenovirus type 12 caused lung cancers in
"nonsmoking" hamsters produced a brief stir of excitement. The Lasker
Syndicate exploited it to help drum up public support for the establishment
of the NCI's Special Virus Cancer Program.
American Cancer Society News Release Says: Human Virus Causes Cancer To Be Produced
In Lungs Of Non-Smoking Animals. Tobacco Growers Information Committee News,
Jan. 1962, page 4. "Human virus (adenovirus, type #12) produced lung cancers
in 80% to 90% of experimental hamsters, according to an American Cancer Society
news service release and news stories by the Associated Press and United Press
International distributed to afternoon clients on April 13. Giving new support
to a possible role of viruses in causing human cancer was a report of a medical
team of Baylor's Dr. John J. Trentin and Dr. Yoshiro Yabe and University of
Texas' Dr. Grant Taylor. The paper, read before an American Association for
Cancer Research meeting at Atlantic City, N.J., told of work being done with
U.S. Army scientists at Fort Dix, N.J. and Fort Sam Houston, Texas. The Texas
researchers said the human adenovirus is of a kind responsible for some respiratory
diseases but sharply differs from agents believed to cause the common cold.
The Trentin research may be the first of several steps to a vaccine for adenovirus-caused
cancers, if they do exist in humans, the release said."
Tobacco
Growers Information Committee News, Jan. 1962 / tobacco document
"Current knowledge of tobacco and health," by TIRC Scientific Director
Robert C. Hockett, April 5, 1962. Page 12: "These results are all recent
and not even yet fully published. I think they are quite exciting. They seem
to me to support our philosophical position that the genesis of lung cancer
must involve a number of interesting factors... Evidently viruses can play a
role, though they seem to act as damaging agents rather than as specific cancer
[emphasized] viruses in the studies cited."
Hockett
1962 / tobacco document
Common Variety Viruses, Cancer Are Linked Anew. By Earl Ubell, Science Editor.
New York Herald Tribune 1962 Apr 14; and: Human Cold, Animal Cancer. Scientific
American, 1962 May. The Herald Tribune: "The three men from Baylor University
Medical School and M.D. Anderson Hospital discovered A-12's cancerous bent by
following up an old idea of the late Dr. Francisco Duran-Reynals, of Yale, one
of the earliest proponents of the virus-cancer concept. Dr. Duran-Reynals believed
common viruses could, under the right conditions, be cancer-causing. He labored
mightily to prove the contention until he died a few years ago." Two known
possible contaminants, SV-40 and polyomavirus were ruled out. Scientific American
noted that "certain animal viruses have been found to cause both acute
infections and, as a later affect, cancer. Moreover, these viruses cannot always
be recovered from the tumors that they produce."
NY Herald Tribune
& Scientific American, 1962 / tobacco document
Virus Causes Lung Cancer in Animals. David Dietz. Cleveland Press, 1962 May
1. In: News Reports and Comment, July 1962. The Tobacco Institute. "A survey
made by the Baylor scientists showed that more than one-fourth of patients treated
for a variety of diseases at one hospital had been exposed to Adenovirus 12
at some time and now possessed antibodies in their blood which made them immune
to the virus. However, it is not yet known how many healthy people have the
virus in their system. It is known that the virus can lie dormant for many years
following a childhood infection and then break out again in later life."
News Reports
and Comment, The Tobacco Institute July 1962 / tobacco document
Scientists Report... Human virus induces animal lung cancers. Tobacco Institute:
Research Reports on Tobacco and Health 1962 Jul;5(1):1, 3. Concerning Trentin
et al.
Tobacco
and Health, July 1962 / tobacco document
The Quest for Human Cancer Viruses. JJ Trentin, Y Yabe, G Taylor. Science 1962
Sep 14;137:835-841. Trentin, Yabe, and Taylor report their findings.
Trentin
- Science 1962 / tobacco document
Cancer produced in animals by 2 common human viruses. By John Troan, Scripps-Howard
Newspapers. New York World Telegram 1962 Sep 14. Mentions that Trentin et al.'s
work was confirmed "shortly afterward" by RJ Huebner at NIH, and that
their work is being supported by the NIH, American Cancer Society, El Paso (Tex.)
Better Health Foundation and the Greater Longview (Tex.) United Fund.
World Telegram
Sep 1962 / tobacco document
Special Report - Eighth International Cancer Congress. Tobacco Institute: Research
Reports on Tobacco and Health 1962 Sep-Oct;5(2). "In a report on the Congress,
The Lancet of August 25 said that 'By far the most striking development revealed
by the Congress was the tremendous change in status of the hypothesis of the
viral etiology of cancer. Altogether more than 50 papers on this topic were
presented.' (At the 1958 Congress in London the program included only four papers
specifically on viruses and cancer.)"
TI Special Report, Sep-Oct 1962 / tobacco document
Comments on the article by Trentin in Science 1962 by an unknown author, Nov.
1, 1962. "Although in my opinion this does not prove that many human cancers
are caused by viruses, it does open the door to an extent which should cause
some jurors to think." Evidently in the early days, there were some who
truly opposed the anti-smokers.
Unknown, Nov. 1962 / tobacco document
Application renewal for research grant by Philip Cooper, Irene P. Goldring and
Herbert Volk, Nov. 2, 1962. Project or subject: Study of the combined effect
of injected viral agents and environmental factors (including smoke and air
pollutants) on the tracheo-bronchial tree and pulmonary parenchyma of experimental
animals, and on tissues in organ culture. In Syrian hamsters, with Ad12 "and
other adenoviruses as type 18."
Cooper Application
Renewal Nov. 1962 / tobacco document
Symposium on chemical carcinogenesis. Introduction. Clin Pharmacol Ther 1962
Nov-Dec;3:774-775. Michael B. Shimkin, Associate Director for Field Studies
of the National Cancer Institute, reporting on a symposium on chemical carcinogenesis:
"In this group of articles, little has been said about the most actively
developing and the most promising approach to the study of neoplastic disease,
that of the role of viruses. This biological environment of man is shared by
other species, and it is no longer tenable to consider that such entities as
the Rous virus of chickens, the Bittner virus of mice, and the polyoma virus
are one-species laboratory curiosities. Indeed, the neoplastic potentials in
hamsters of the Simian Virus 40 and of the human Adenovirus 12 seem to be close
to the very lock of the human neoplastic secret."
Shimkin
1962 / tobacco document
Tobacco Industry Research Council, Current Digest of Scientific Papers Relating
to Tobacco Use 1963 Jan;8(3):25. RJ Huebner et al. report their experiment with
Ad12 confirming Trentin et al. and additionally with Ad18 (Proc Natl Acad Sci
1962 Dec;48:2051-2058).
TIRC
Current Digest Dec. 1962 / tobacco document
Program of the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health 1963.
"For example, in research on viruses as a cause of cancer, an area in whcih
the Institute has focused intensive efforts, more than 190 grants are in effect
in this country and abroad.... Although to date, no human cancer-causing virus
has been found, research by grantee Dr. J. Trentin and co-workers at Baylor
University in Texas touches on a long-standing suspicion that viruses which
cause acute infections in man may also play a role in causing cancer.... At
the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Robert J. Huebner
and colleagues, using adenoviruses 12 and 18, have obtained similar results."
NCI
Program, 1963 / tobacco document
Jan. 28, 1963 memo from PR Counsel Leonard S. Zahn of Hill & Knowlton to
Alexander Holtzman concerning titles of "interesting papars" at the
17th Annual Symposium on Fundamental Cancer Research session on "Viruses,
nucleic acids and cancer," to be held in February 1963.
Zahm memo Jan. 1963 / tobacco document
Special report from Houston. Scientists discuss viruses and cancer. Tobacco
Institute, Research Reports on Tobacco and Health 1963 Mar-Apr;6(1). Concerning
the 17th Annual Symposium on Fundamental Cancer Research sponsored by MD Anderson
Hospital and Tumor Institute. The session on viruses drew over 1000 registrants.
Tobacco
and Health Mar-Apr 1963 / tobacco document
Memo from Philip Cooper of the Veterans Administration Hospital, Bronx, NY,
to Robert C. Hockett of the TIRC, April 16, 1963. Cooper met with John Trentin;
"it appears obvious to me that we are in a better position using an influenza
virus, such as PR-8, or the vaccinia virus in lung studies for they are more
likely to produce epithelial changes, whereas the adenovirus 12, so far seems
to be inducing malignant connective tissue tumors. Maria Duran-Reynals is to
use the vaccinia to induce pulmonary lesions. The animals will subsequently
be exposed to gases. Dr. Geldring, meanwhile, will combine the work with the
influenza virus."
Cooper memo to Hockett, 1963 / tobacco document
The Niles Cluster. Newsweek 1963 Apr 22. Discusses the investigation into a
possible viral cause of a cluster of leukemia cases in Niles, Illinois, and
mentions the adenovirus work of Trentin et al.
Newsweek
1963 April / tobacco document
May 7, 1963 Hill & Knowlton memo concerning House hearings on NIH appropriations
in March 1963. From NCI Director Kenneth Endicott's prepared statement: "To
date no human cancer-causing virus has been found. However, we know for example
of a group of human viruses that have not yet been linked with specific diseases,
and some animal viruses that cause bizarre changes in human cells growing in
tissue culture.... Our interest has been aroused by recent evidence obtained
independently by Dr. John J. Trentin, Baylor University, and Dr. Robert J. Huebner,
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, that some of the human
adenoviruses, which cause acute respiratory illness, produce tumors in hamsters...."
Hill & Knowlton Memo May 7, 1963 / tobacco document
July 12, 1963, announcement of appointments to the NCI's Board of Scientific
Counselors, including Leon Jacobson (a member of the CTR SAB from 1954 to 1991)
and John J. Trentin, with William U. Gardner (a member of the CTR SAB from 1971-85)
as the new chairman of the Board.
NCI Board of Scientific Counselors July 1963 / tobacco document
Application for TIRC Research Grant from Morris Pollard of the University of
Notre Dame, Aug. 13, 1963. Project or Subject: Carcinogenesis in Germfree Animals.
Committee: Jacobson, Kotin and Lynch. Another emphasis on chemical carcinogens.
Pollard Grant Application 1963 / tobacco document
In 1964, the current deputy director of the NCI, Alan Rabson, and his wife,
Ruth Kirschstein, the acting director of the National Institutes of Health,
with FJ Paul, published their own paper adding that Ad12 caused tumors in mice:
Tumors produced by Adenovirus 12 in mastomys and mice. J Natl Cancer Inst 1964;32:77-82.
Both Rabson and Kirschstein were also involved in subsequent research.
Rabson's
adenovirus research / Pub Med
Kirschstein's adenovirus research / Pub Med
In a 1965 letter to Paul D. Smith, Vice President and General Counsel of Philip
Morris, Alexander Holtzmann describes how R. Lee Clark intimidated Dr. Leon
Dmochowski out of testifying to Congress about the evidence that human cancers
may be caused by viruses. "As to Dr. Dmochowski he observed that he was
not raising any issues of academic or scientific freedom because he would not
prevent him from appearing. But he repeated that it would be poor judgment on
Dmochowski's part to agree to this. I told him that this attitude was tantamount
to his prohibiting Dmochowski from cooperating since he must know that Dmochowski
would not go ahead when informed how Clark felt about it. He let this pass without
comment."
Holtzmann letter, 1965 / tobacco document
John J. Trentin only published a few more papers on adenovirus: Animal-man cancer
probes continue. GL Van Hoosier, W Stenback, SC Dunn, EJ Macdonald, MC Macdonald,
HG Taylor, JJ Trentin. JAMA 1966 Jun 27;196(13):Suppl:30-31; and Stimulation
of DNA synthesis in human and hamster cells by human adenovirus types 12 and
5. M Takahashi, GL Van Hoosier Jr, JJ Trentin. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 1966 Jul;122(3):740-746.
No Pub Med abstracts.
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