Fighting cancer
In the 1960s, doctors in the US developed a radical new approach to treating cancer, using several toxic chemicals at once, and revolutionising survival rates.
In the 1960s doctors began ground-breaking work into using several toxic chemicals at once to treat cancer. Combination chemotherapy, as it was called, would revolutionise cancer survival rates, particularly for Hodgkin Lymphoma, until then a virtual death sentence. Louise Hidalgo has been talking to the doctor who played a key part in that breakthrough, clinical oncologist, Vincent DeVita who has spent his more than 50-year career trying to cure cancer.
Picture: Vincent DeVita (centre) and colleagues George Canellos and Bob Young circa 1971 (Credit: Joel Carl Freid)
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- Mon 23 Dec 201908:50GMTBBC World Service
- Mon 23 Dec 201912:50GMTBBC World Service
- Mon 23 Dec 201913:50GMTBBC World Service News Internet
- Mon 23 Dec 201916:50GMTBBC World Service Australasia
- Mon 23 Dec 201918:50GMTBBC World Service except Australasia, East and Southern Africa, South Asia & West and Central Africa
- Mon 23 Dec 201921:50GMTBBC World Service South Asia
- Mon 23 Dec 201923:50GMTBBC World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Christmas Eve 201903:50GMTBBC World Service UK DAB/Freeview & Online only
- Christmas Eve 201904:50GMTBBC World Service Australasia, Americas and the Caribbean, South Asia & East Asia only
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