Biden touts 'Cancer Moonshot' on JFK speech anniversary in Boston
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[September 13, 2022]
By Nandita Bose and Trevor Hunnicutt
BOSTON (Reuters) -President Joe Biden signed orders on Monday to push
more government dollars to the U.S. biotechnology industry, as he
promoted his initiative to create new treatments and cut the death rate
from cancer. Cancer "doesn’t care if you’re Republican or Democrat,”
Biden said at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, on the 60th
anniversary of JFK's 'Moonshot' speech that urged Americans to lead in
the exploration of space.
Biden drew a parallel between the former president's goal of reaching
the moon and his own goal of cutting cancer death rates in half in the
next 25 years.
"Today I'm setting a long term goal for the Cancer Moonshot - to rally
American ingenuity, we engage like we did to reach the moon, but
actually cure cancers...once and for all," Biden said.
He said research could spark medical breakthroughs, including a vaccine
to prevent cancer, or a blood test that could detect cancer in an annual
physical.
The executive order allows the federal government to direct funding for
the use of microbes and other biologically derived resources to make new
foods, fertilizers and seeds, as well as making mining operations more
efficient, administration officials said.
The order "directs the federal government to ensure biotechnologies
invented in the United States of America are made in the United States
of America," Biden said.
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Biomanufacturing has been used to
generate cancer treatments, including those derived from plants or
using re-engineered immune cells.
The White House did not provide any specifics on how much money
would be available, where it would come from or how it would be
allocated. Further details are expected at a White House summit on
the topic Wednesday.
The U.S. federal government is already a source of
funds to biotechnology research and development (R&D) through the
National Institute of Health, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and
other agencies. Overall U.S. funding for R&D has dropped as a
percentage of gross domestic product since a peak in the 1950s, a
trend Biden has pledged to reverse.
Potential applications range from the biodiesel fuels made by
Renewable Energy Group to the COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech
or the genetically modified seeds made by Corteva Inc.
Biden also named Dr. Renee Wegrzyn, a longtime science adviser and
who most recently served at the biotech company Ginkgo Bioworks
Holdings Inc, as the first director of the Advanced Research
Projects Agency for Health, a U.S. government-run biomedical
research group.
Biden's son Beau died of brain cancer in 2015 at age 46, something
the president has said helps inform his passion for the project.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Nandita Bose; Editing by Heather
Timmons and Aurora Ellis)
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