In the science editorial, it said very plainly that all the labs were free to use whatever testing they thought would be most effective. It seems like a few patients now think otherwise, but as far as I can tell, it's just based on an internet rumour. Apparently the WPI had some problem with contamination during the testing period which caused them problems, but I've not seen any evidence that the BWG wanted them to using anything but the most reliable testing they had.
I haven't read up on the details yet either.
But my comments were based on what I understood about the BWG before the results came out.
I thought that the methodology was a compromise, and that Judy could not do all aspects of it exactly the way she wanted.
Maybe the Science article meant that they could use 'any testing'
within certain parameters...
You know how badly these types of things get reported.
But nevertheless, the BWG was a complete failure, and I had expected at least some mixed results.
I don't think we'll be able to get to the bottom of this here, and I'm not too sure how useful it is to try to debate these matters,
I agree, but I still find it an interesting subject, so I enjoy discussing it.
but even if we're not going to get to the bottom of this, I am interested/confused by the claim that the BWG results have strengthened the WPI's position, when their testing was shown to be unreliable).
I don't think it's the BWG results that people are saying strengthens the WPI's position... It's the partial retraction of the Science paper...
The authors now say that VP62 was an artificial construct... It was
not cloned from a full isolate... It was cloned from partial sequences that were stiched together in the lab (don't ask me how they do that!)... (apparently this was common knowledge, but I don't think that I knew this before.)
And they now say that VP62 was not present in the samples in the Science paper after all... The samples were contaminated by Silverman's positive control VP62 plasmids, and that's what he detected and sequenced in his lab...
So it seems that it was other MLV-related viruses (not VP62) that were present in the WPI's research...
The reason why this might strengthen the WPI's work is because it could explain why no one can find XMRV when looking for VP62. It just doesn't exist in nature, as far as we now know.
Using very low specificity in her tests, Mikovits has always found a diverse range of sequences, and not just VP62-like sequences.
This could also explain the discrepancy between Alter's work and Mikovits' work (i.e. possibly, there is no difference.)
But this does all seem like speculation at the moment... I feel that we are all out of the loop about it all, and don't really know what's going on.
If Mikovits and Alter and the prostate cancer scientists are
only finding contamination, then there's a heck of a lot of contamination going around in the labs of the top scientists that they need to get to grips with.
It also seems that a new man-made retrovirus, with an affinity for human tissue, is on the loose, and could potentially contaminate medicine products and vaccines.
And it also seems that Mikovits may, at the very least, have found a biomarker. She says that it is very hard to contaminate your samples with anti-bodies.
So her antibody results in themselves seem like a very worthwhile research avenue to pursue even if the rest of it comes to nothing.
Just my thoughts.