Peter Attia· MD
So testicular, basically, seminobinous testicular tumor. That's right. You could cure, with doublet chemotherapy, you could cure the large majority, greater than 90% even. But if a woman had metastatic breast cancer in 1974, and a woman had metastatic breast cancer 40 years later. Shockingly little difference. I mean, we had millions median survival extensions of maybe six months, 12 months? Yeah, per new therapy that might come along at best. And then you could stack a few of those in a disease like breast cancer. So what actually kills the population of cancer, breast, colon, prostate, and lung, and then pick up some other notables that are still refractory to this day, like pancreatic cancer and so on, in terms of number of deaths. But the common cancers, they are perturbed at best, a little bit by these agents.