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Wednesday, Aug 2 2023

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Henrietta Lacks' Family Settles Over Research Use Of Her Cancer Cells

The cells, known as HeLa, had "remarkable properties" allowing endless reproduction for medical research purposes, NPR explains, but they were taken without Henrietta Lacks' consent in 1950s. The settlement was reached with her family on what would have been her 103rd birthday.

The family of Henrietta Lacks has reached a settlement with a science and technology company that it says used cells taken without Lacks' consent in the 1950s to develop products it later sold for a profit. ... Those cells 鈥 now known as HeLa cells 鈥 had remarkable properties that allowed them to be endlessly reproduced, and they have since been used for a variety of scientific breakthroughs, including research about the human genome and the development of the polio and COVID-19 vaccines. (Hernandez, 8/1)

Lacks鈥檚 cells were taken at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore in 1951 when she underwent treatment for cervical cancer. They were eventually used to create a cell line named after her, HeLa (pronounced hee-la). It is the most prolific and widely used human cell line in biology. Thermo Fisher said in an unsuccessful motion to dismiss the suit in January that among its more than 100,000 products, 鈥渁 handful are HeLa-related.鈥 But it said HeLa cells were first commercialized by others almost immediately after a Johns Hopkins researcher obtained them. (Saltzman, 8/1)

For what would have been Henrietta Lacks鈥檚 103th birthday, her family got her some justice: A settlement with Thermo Fisher Scientific over the Massachusetts-based company鈥檚 use of cells obtained without her consent seven decades ago. The story of Lacks, a Black woman whose cells have contributed to scientific breakthroughs ranging from the development of polio and cancer treatments to the mapping of the human genome, is one of the best-known tales of the exploitation of marginalized groups in the name of medical progress. (Merelli, 8/1)

In an amazing twist of fate, the aggressive cervical cancer tumor that killed聽Henrietta Lacks, a 31-year old African American mother, became an聽essential tool聽that helped the biomedical field flourish in the 20th century. As a聽cancer researcher聽who uses HeLa cells in my everyday work, even I sometimes find it hard to believe. On Aug. 1, 2023, over 70 years after doctors took Lacks鈥 cells without her consent or knowledge, her family聽reached a settlement聽with biotech company Thermo Fisher. Lacks鈥 descendants had sued the company in 2021 for making billions of dollars off her cells. The family has not been previously been compensated. (Martinez, 8/1)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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