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 (45)
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Some of you commenters sound very ignorant. You really believe pharmaceutical companies and the FDA try to inhibit discovery and translation? What's your evidence for these assertions? Yes, this kid is talented. Is he a scientific messiah who invented something no one's thought of before? No. If he has seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants. He did what most/all scientists do: he made a marginal step in innovation, and it worked. I'm not saying he did not accomplish something great, but let's please dispell the myth that he's already on the level of people like Bob Langer. Just search "carbon nanotube biosensor" or more specifically "carbon nanotube immunoassay": there are numerous hits. This research has been ongoing for a decade. http://phys.org/news175447210.html http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-11032010-150610/unrestricted/abera_diss.pdf https://www.google.com/search?q=carbon+nanotube+biosensor&aq=f&oq=carbon+nanotube+biosensor&aqs=chrome.0.57j0l3.4587j0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Posted by Jack on May 13,2013 | 07:42 AM
re Pancreatic cancer dipstick - fantastic. Please hurry up availabilty! In Brisbane, Australia, the Institute of Molecular Science has identified 2000 genes from operation specimens of pancreatic cancer. Perhaps they could assist? I had a pancreatic duct cyst, before was cancer, but what might happen to my remaining head of pancreas?
Posted by R Hewland on May 10,2013 | 01:52 AM
I will be participating in the International Science and Engineering Fair this year testing probiotics. All I can say is, "Wow Jack Andraka's research is amazing!"
Posted by Maddy on May 5,2013 | 12:59 PM
Wow, what a great story. With the "reformers" hijacking public school funds in so many places to give them to the executives of for-profit (or non-profit, for that matter) "charter" schools, we aren't likely to have many more kids like this in this generation. I'm charmed by the inexpensive solutions he found -- I have ho doubt if this breakthrough had been done by one of the big pharma companies the apparatus would cost $250,000 and each testee would be charged $10,000. Well, they might be anyway, our medical care system is so broken.
Posted by Procopius on May 3,2013 | 04:15 AM
So why after almost a year has this kid's work not been published in a reputable journal. I'm sorry but real research is verified by peers and gets published. I have my doubts that this was either his own work or if it has merit. When it gets peer reviewed I will take it more seriously.
Posted by coolhead on May 2,2013 | 12:56 PM
Fabulous that he's made this breakthrough but when will it be put into use by doctors?
Posted by BDePaula on April 30,2013 | 03:59 PM
Phantastic, I'm full of respect, best regards from Germany! Jo, Berlin
Posted by Jo on April 26,2013 | 06:21 PM
there is something really special about kids at this age. their minds have not yet gotten so stuck in traditional ways of research that limits creative thinking. his way of coping with the loss of a family member led him to understand the disease, and his brilliant mind helped him understand the mechanism to detect it. but it was the matter of being fourteen that allowed his mind to not only make the connection but also to disregard any notion of impossibility.
Posted by ande spenser on April 23,2013 | 01:27 PM
That is completely managing and inspiring!!! Jack, if you are reading this thank-you and keep in doing what you do!!!
Posted by Natasha on March 28,2013 | 07:38 PM
God Bless God Our Father for blessing you with the brains to be so bright. Wonder how many other genius people like yourself have been murdered through abortion. God bless your gifted brother, Luke and your Mom who from all reports is a self-sacrificing Mom. May you continue your research for the honor and glory of God and for the good of humanity. Keeping you in prayer. Keep up the good work.
Posted by Kathy Reilly RN on March 20,2013 | 03:39 PM
I recently wrote a blog about this. You can read it here. http://www.empowernetwork.com/wmckay/blog/cancer-cure-not-exactly/
Posted by Wendell McKay on March 18,2013 | 09:53 PM
DEAR JACK ANDRAKA, I WATCHED YOUR PRESENTATION ON U-TUBE ABOUT YOUR TEST FOR PANCREAS,AND LUNG CANCER.IT WAS VERY INTERRESTING. I HAVE A BOOK YOU MIGHT LIKE TO READ, THE TITLE IS " WORLD WITHOUT CANCER " BY G. EDWARD GRIFFIN. IN HIS BOOK HE DOCUMENTS THAT IN THE MID 1960'S, Dr.MANUEL NAVARRO, PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE, AND SURGERY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF SANTO TOMAS IN MANILLA, WAS USING A CANCER TEST THAT DETECTED CANCER OF ALL TYPES BY DETECTING THE PRESENTS OF C G H (CHORIONIC GONADOTROPHIC HORMONE ).THE CGH IS SOMETIMES REFERED TO AS HCG. I HAD THIS TEST RUN ON ME IN MARCH OF 1980. I HAVE ALSO HAD TWO TESTS RUN ON ME CALLED THE A F P SERUM (ALPHA FETOPROTEIN SERUM TEST) ONE IN JULY 2003, AND AGAIN IN MARCH OF 2013. ALL THESE TESTS ARE BASED ON THE RESEARCH BUY JOHN BEARD, A PROFESSOR OF EMBRYOLOGY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH IN SCOTLAND. HE AUTHORED A PAPER PUBLISHED IN THE BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL THE "LANCET" IN 1902 IN WITCH HE PROVED THAT THE CANCER CELL IS IDENTICAL TO THE "TROPHOBLAST CELL THAT IS PRODUCTED DURING PREGNANCY,BUT IS DESTROYED DURING NORMAL CHILD BERTH. THE PANCREAS IS THE FIRST LINE OF DEFENCE AGAINST CANCER, AND THE SECOND LINE OF DEFENCE IS VITAMIN B-17. WE ARE STEAL STUCK WITH THE PROBLEM OF FINDING A Dr. THAT HAS THE GOOD SINCE, AND HAS NOT BEEN " BLACK-MAILED " BY THE AMA, FDA,AND GOVERNMENT WHO HAVE OUT-LAWED ANY SANE METHODE OF TREATMENT FOR CANCER!!! THANK YOU FOR LETTING ME EXSPRESS MY OPINIONS, AND, JACK, IF YOU GET THIS COMMENT SEND ME AN E-MAIL AT jd41817@yahoo.com you take care JD OSBORNE
Posted by JD OSBORNE on March 18,2013 | 04:16 PM
its to bad that the FDA is a criminal enterprise run to benefit the drug industry. i hope this young man and his brain dont become the victim of their assaults.
Posted by TOM on March 11,2013 | 04:06 PM
Great article. Well-written, and a nice, tingly final line.
Posted by Christopher Wood on March 5,2013 | 10:56 AM
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