No, they aren't: the second is irrelevant and unphysical. Highly-pressurised cores? Really? "Dense", I could buy, but:<p>• If there's blood supply, then (A) it can't be a much higher pressure than the blood pressure (unless there's some Rube Goldberg machine involving active transport), and (B) the tumour is reachable by treatments like this;<p>• And if there isn't blood supply, then the tumour's core is necrotic, and a treatment to kill the dead cells wouldn't do anything anyway. (Sure, killing the tissue that isolates a lump of necrotic flesh from the rest of the body might cause new and exciting problems, but somehow I think those might be preferable to incurable breast cancer.)<p>The second is just not a relevant criticism. The third, if it's an actual issue, can <i>probably</i> be worked around by tweaking the molecule slightly – and if not, suppressing the immune system isn't that difficult (it's a known side-effect of many chemotherapies). The first, if it's an issue, can be avoided by injecting the medicine near the target site.<p>I agree that this treatment might not work in humans, but all the AI's done is taken a generic list of potential concerns, and inserted technobabble to try to make it match the scenario. If you want generic criticism, see <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47209076">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47209076</a>: at least that's <i>true</i>.
You're incredibly wrong. You also cited my own comment at me.<p>The problem of high interstitial pressure (not blood pressure) interfering with drug delivery in tumors is basic cancer biology. If you don't believe me, here's:<p>A review published in a reputable oncology journal, with over 100 citations, entirely about targeting interstitial pressure, with an abstract leading with "Tumor interstitial pressure is a fundamental feature of cancer biology. Elevation in tumor pressure affects the efficacy of cancer treatment."
<a href="https://aacrjournals.org/cancerres/article/74/10/2655/592612/Releasing-Pressure-in-Tumors-What-Do-We-Know-So" rel="nofollow">https://aacrjournals.org/cancerres/article/74/10/2655/592612...</a><p>Another review, also a reputable oncology journal, 1000 citations, about tumor stroma more generally, which lists high interstitial pressure as a mechanism by which tumors limit drug access and includes a nice diagram (Figure 2a).
<a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41571-018-0007-1" rel="nofollow">https://www.nature.com/articles/s41571-018-0007-1</a><p>That's how basic this fact is. 1000 citation reviews in Nature have beautiful fucking diagrams of it. I'm pretty sure it was in the textbook of my undergraduate biology class.<p>If you don't know shit, don't talk shit. People will criticize LLMs for being overconfident while writing essays from their ass.