Beating Glioblastoma with Repurposed Drugs – Exactly How Ben Williams Did It
It began during a card game in 1995. As Professor Ben Williams won poker hand after hand against his UCSD colleagues, he proudly arranged his chips in neat stacks to his right. To his left, a heaping pile of unruly chips was the first sign of his lurking, yet undiagnosed brain cancer. This was followed by problems with walking, parking his car, and other perceptual issues involving left-sided neglect, signs characteristic of stroke or brain injury. Right-sided brain lesions produce a condition where a person becomes strangely unaware of their left side. In Ben Williams’ case, it reflected brain cancer of the worst kind, a tumor known as Glioblastoma Multiforme [GBM], one with an average survival of little more than one year. After a March 30, 1995, MRI scan revealed the cancer that occupied his right parietal lobe, his Oncologist candidly told Ben that he would be lucky to survive 18 months even if he did everything right - that is if he dutifully followed all medical advice in receivi...