Sent: Th .
From:
Subject: the ctc microchip test
To: jeffrey epstein <jeevacation©gmail.com>
Hi Jeffrey,
I'm helping a friend with stage 4 breast cancer-- she's about to take an
inhibitor trial-- I'm contacting Harvard to see if she can get a CTC microchip
test. Mass General are the leaders in this. It's not FDA approved.
CTC microchip testing is the way to go and needs support. I thought you
should look into it. I can send you the info if you are interested.
Ctc microchip allows you to test the blood for circulating tumor cells. what's
critical about it is that one can test for the entire pool of mutations in 'genetic
real time': pre-inhibitor trial, during and post-- and one can get a sense of
what type of mutations are either causing the resilience and/or driving tumor
growth.
instead of blindly applying inhibitors in sequence to one another-- the blood
test allows one to apply a targeted cocktail inhibitor approach depending on
the evolving pattern of mutations in the blood.
ctc's are commonly used right now for counting cancer cell load-- but only
the sparsely available micro-chip type can extract cancer cells and thus
analyze them for mutation type.
let me know what you think and I'll send you the info about the team at Mass
General-- I think Sloan Kettering is experimenting with it too.
Thanks
cell:
email:
EFTA_R1_00054146
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