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The Peter Attia Drive

#181 - Robert Gatenby, M.D.: Viewing cancer through an evolutionary lens and why this offers a radically different approach to treatment

The Peter Attia Drive

Peter Attia, MD

Health & Fitness, Medicine, Fitness

4.77.3K Ratings

🗓️ 25 October 2021

⏱️ 120 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Robert (Bob) Gatenby is a radiologist who specializes in exploring theoretical and experimental models of evolutionary dynamics in cancer and cancer drug resistance. He has developed an adaptive therapy approach for treating cancer which has shown promise in improving survival times with less cumulative drug use. In this episode, Bob explains what brought him into medicine, his search for organizing principles from which to understand cancer, and the mathematical modeling of other complex systems that led him to model the dynamics of tumor cell changes in cancer. He discusses his pilot clinical trial treating metastatic prostate cancer, in which he used an evolutionary game theory model to analyze patient-specific tumor dynamics and determine the on/off cycling of treatment. He describes how altering chemotherapy to maximize the fitness ratio between drug-sensitive and drug-resistant cancer cells can increase patient survival and explains how treatment of metastatic cancer may be improved using adaptive therapy and strategic sequencing of different chemotherapy drugs.

We discuss:

  • Bob’s unlikely path to medicine and disappointment with his medical school experience [1:45];
  • Rethinking the approach to cancer: using first principles and applying mathematical models [12:15];
  • Relating predator-prey models to cancer [26:30];
  • Insights into cancer gathered from ecological models of pests and pesticides [32:15];
  • Bob’s pilot clinical trial: the advantages of adaptive therapy compared to standard prostate cancer treatment [41:45];
  • New avenues of cancer therapy: utilizing drug-sensitive cancer cells to control drug-resistant cancer cells [48:15];
  • The vulnerability of small populations of cancer cells and the problem with a “single strike” treatment approach [56:00];
  • Using a sequence of therapies to make cancer cells more susceptible to targeted treatment [1:05:00];
  • How immunotherapy fits into the cancer treatment toolkit [1:15:30];
  • Why cancer spreads, where it metastasizes, and the source-sync trade off [1:20:15];
  • Defining Eco- and Evo-indices and how they can be used to make better clinical decisions [1:29:45];
  • Advantages of early screening for cancer [1:40:15];
  • Bob’s goals for follow-ups after the success of his prostate cancer trial [1:42:15];
  • Treatment options for cancer patients who have “failed therapy” [1:51:15];
  • More.

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Show notes page for this episode: https://peterattiamd.com/RobertGatenby

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone, welcome to the Drive Podcast. I'm your host, Peter Atia. This podcast, my

0:15.5

website, and my weekly newsletter, I'll focus on the goal of translating the science

0:19.2

of longevity into something accessible for everyone. Our goal is to provide the best

0:23.6

content in health and wellness, full stop, and we've assembled a great team of analysts

0:28.1

to make this happen. If you enjoy this podcast, we've created a membership program that

0:32.2

brings you far more in depth content if you want to take your knowledge of this space

0:35.9

to the next level. At the end of this episode, I'll explain what those benefits are,

0:40.0

or if you want to learn more now, head over to peteratiamd.com forward slash subscribe.

0:46.1

Now, without further delay, here's today's episode.

0:50.8

Everyone, my guess this week is Dr. Bob Gainby. Bob is a radiologist whose specialty

0:57.6

is treating oncology through an evolutionary lens. Now, I stumbled across his work when doing

1:04.2

research for another podcast and got completely transfixed down the rabbit hole of what he does.

1:10.9

This is a simply fascinating podcast and we get into what I believe is a very important way that

1:16.4

we need to consider treating cancer. And I hope that this podcast will provide both some hope to

1:22.2

people who themselves have cancer, but of equal importance inspires some people who are on the front

1:27.0

lines of cancer research in exploring another way to think about treating a disease for which,

1:32.0

frankly, we haven't had a lot of great success over the past 50 years.

1:41.0

Hey, Bob, thanks so much for making time to chat today. I've been looking forward to this one

1:44.5

for quite some time. Thanks for having me. I'll tell you, I kind of stumbled across your work

1:50.4

in preparing actually for another podcast. I was doing another podcast some time ago and in the

1:56.2

process of it actually came across an article in Wired about you, which we'll obviously link to in

2:02.9

the show notes. And that whole concept just quickly captivated me such that I kind of made a note

...

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