Jack Andraka, the Teen Prodigy of Pancreatic Cancer
A high school sophomore won the youth achievement Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award for inventing a new method to detect a lethal cancer
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2012, Subscribe
It’s first period digital arts class, and the assignment is to make Photoshop monsters. Sophomore Jack Andraka considers crossing a velociraptor with a Brazilian wandering spider, while another boy grafts butterfly wings onto a rhinoceros. Meanwhile, the teacher lectures on the deranged genius of Doctor Moreau and Frankenstein, “a man who created something he didn’t take responsibility for.”
“You don’t have to do this, Jack!” somebody in back shouts.
The silver glint of a retainer: Andraka grins. Since he won the $75,000 grand prize at this past spring’s Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, one of the few freshman ever to do so, he’s become a North County High School celebrity to rival any soccer star or homecoming queen. A series of jokes ensue about Andraka’s mad scientist doings in the school’s imaginary “dungeon” laboratory. In reality, Andraka created his potentially revolutionary pancreatic cancer detection tool at nearby Johns Hopkins University, though he does sometimes tinker in a small basement lab at the family’s house in leafy Crownsville, Maryland, where a homemade particle accelerator crowds the foosball table.
This 15-year-old “Edison of our times,” as Andraka’s Hopkins mentor has called him, wears red Nikes carefully coordinated with his Intel T-shirt. His shaggy haircut is somewhere between Beatles and Bieber. At school one day, he cites papers from leading scientific publications, including Science, Nature and the Journal of Clinical Neurology. And that’s just in English class. In chemistry, he tells the teacher that he will make up a missed lab at home, where of course he has plenty of nitric acid to work with. In calculus, he does not join the other students who cluster around a blackboard equation like hungry young lions at a kill. “That’s so trivial,” he says, and plops down at a desk to catch up on assigned chapters from Brave New World instead. Nobody stops him, perhaps because last year, when his biology teacher confiscated his clandestine reading material on carbon nanotubes, he was in the midst of the epiphany that scientists think has the potential to save lives.
After school Andraka’s mom, Jane, a hospital anesthetist, arrives in her battered red Ford Escort station wagon with a saving supply of chocolate milk. She soon learns that Jack’s big brother, Luke—a senior, and a previous finalist in the same elite science fair—has been ordered to bring his handmade arc furnace home. He built it in a school lab, but teachers grew nervous when he mentioned that the device could generate temperatures of several thousand degrees Fahrenheit, and melted a steel screw to prove it. The contraption will find a spot in the Andraka basement.
“I just say ‘Don’t burn down the house or kill yourself or your brother,’” the boys’ mother cheerfully explains. “I don’t know enough physics and math to know if that’s a death ray or not. I say use common sense, but I don’t know what they’re working on down there.”
***
Pancreatic cancer is one of the most lethal cancers, with a five-year survival rate of 6 percent. Some 40,000 people die of it each year. The diagnosis can be devastating because it is often delivered late, after the cancer has spread. Unlike the breast or colon, the pancreas is nestled deep in the body cavity and difficult to image, and there is no telltale early symptom or lump. “By the time you bring this to a physician, it’s too late,” says Anirban Maitra, a Johns Hopkins pathologist and pancreatic cancer researcher who is Andraka’s mentor. “The drugs we have aren’t good for this disease.”
But as the cancer takes hold, the body does issue an unmistakable distress signal: an overabundance of a protein called mesothelin. The problem is that scientists haven’t yet developed a surefire way to look for this red flag in the course of a standard physical. “The first point of entry would have to be a cheap blood test done with a simple prick,” Maitra says.
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Comments (21)
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We need this screening tool now...not a decade from now. How many of us will die in the next 10 years when we might have been spared?
Posted by Kathryn on February 11,2013 | 12:50 PM
Where can you get tested? Is Anyone other then John Hopkins administering this test? Who's making the strips? I want to get tested.
Posted by Marta on February 11,2013 | 11:47 AM
While I found this fantastic, and good for the kid... why did whoever wrote this feel compelled to write about what the kid is wearing and what his hair is like? There are pictures of the kid posted and this information has no relevenece to his scientific work. That actively made me mad. It felt shallow, like it had something to do with what he has done.
Posted by Emmi on February 11,2013 | 05:17 AM
He's not arrogant, at least not any more than any other 14 year old. Humility comes with maturity. There are many failures in his future, just like with any scientist who is willing to take risks. Humility comes with experience.
Posted by Chrispina on February 10,2013 | 04:45 PM
Congratulations jake. Keep going with your research and hopefully u can cure cancer.
Posted by Ann on February 9,2013 | 06:37 PM
Kudos to Jack. Perhaps the bigger story here is what so many of us are capable of with a little passion, perseverance and most important, belief in the possibility of things. I beg to differ with phillydoc, I don't think Jack is arrogant; I think he's exuberant, overflowing with the excitement of discovery (as we all once were). Self-righteous adherence to pedagogical orthodoxy, not ego--is the monster you have to watch out for.
Posted by John Dolan on February 9,2013 | 10:54 AM
Wow. So many harsh comments. Kudos to his parents for giving him access to as much knowledge as he could take! I reckon all kids have the potential for genius - most just suffer from intellectual malnourishment!
Posted by Audra on February 7,2013 | 02:51 AM
An amazing young man. I often think that children around the world hold the answers to many of our human issues, but too often they exist in poverty as well as dangerous and mind numbing enviroments because as adults we abdicate our responsibilities to protect and nurture all children. How sad that phillydoc can only scold and scoff. Just the attitude that promotes policies that perpetuate the loss of contributions locked in the minds of many children. We fail the children and consequentially ourselves. Jack and his brother are already working very hard to make the world better for all of us. I hope we are encouraged to work to protect and educate all children. As a parent and professor, I have experienced the joy of helping children and young adults achieve those aha moments.
Posted by Cecilia on February 7,2013 | 04:59 PM
This kid sounds like an arrogant snot. He might be brilliant but he would do well to learn some humility. Even if calculus is trivial and you do have a lab at home, your achievements should not make you exempt from following the same rules as everyone else. Ego is a terrible monster.
Posted by phillydoc on February 7,2013 | 02:24 PM
Excellent article, very informative, but as for him being named the Edison of our times, I have to disagree. Edison was a plagiarizing hack, who's greatest achievement was MARKETING the light bulb. I think a better name would be Tesla.
Posted by Isaac Shaw on February 7,2013 | 10:52 AM
This young man has made HUGE progress in the fight against one of the deadliest cancers. The 5-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer is SIX PERCENT. This year, 37,000 Americans will succumb to pancreatic cancer. It is the 4th-leading cause of cancer deaths, and by 2015, it will surpass breast cancer and colorectal cancer to become the 2nd-leading cause of cancer deaths, surpassed only by lung cancer, yet the National Cancer Institute (NCI) allocates only approximately 2% of its budget for pancreatic cancer research. The problem with pancreatic cancer is that it usually produces no symptoms until it is far too late to treat it. Jake's simple, inexpensive blood test may provide that early detection that we have for many kinds of cancers (prostate, breast, colorectal, to name a few). This is a personal topic for me; my wife of 40 years died of pancreatic cancer. After I read the Smithsonian article, I sent Jake a card thanking him for his work. You know what? He sent me a Christmas card, and included a personal note! Classy!
Posted by Stan Oberg on February 1,2013 | 12:43 AM
@Lisa, I have to disagree with your statement about Jack living a "privileged" life. This kid lives an upper middle-class life, whereas, Bill Gates' kids live a true privileged life. This is an example of inherent intelligence along with a supportive family. While I understand your premise, I disagree with your snide disdain for this kid's family. I would venture to say, he would be successful no matter his circumstance.
Posted by Hannah on February 1,2013 | 01:07 PM
Chris my late husband fought his cancer following Dr. Max Gerson, additonal herbs and vitamins. He did not do any chemo or radiation. The doctors "gave" him 90 days, he lasted 8 years.
Posted by Nancy Smith on January 30,2013 | 02:52 PM
This is great. With luck this kids hard work will continue to yield benefits to people throughout his life. AND... This is only possible because he lives a life of privilege, with well educated, well-paid parents who are able to indulge his whims of keeping chemistry equipment in the basement, who have a baseline of knowledge about how to access medical journals, or who to email (what category of person, not specific individuals) who would be able to say "Yes, come intern at our lab." If only more kids had such resources, and such access, then stories like this might not be so rare. They'd never be common but you have to wonder how many, born with the aptitude for genius but lacking the privilege, never get a chance to fulfill their inborn promise.
Posted by Lisa on January 29,2013 | 01:45 AM
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