🛠️ Why This Is Different

(And Why It Might Work)

Many organizations, like the Osteosarcoma Institute, are funding research in search of better treatments. But this initiative is fundamentally different — not because we oppose those efforts, but because we believe the entire architecture of treatment development needs to evolve.


🔄 The Ability to Iterate — That’s What Changes Outcomes

What has truly transformed survival in some cancers — especially pediatric leukemia — isn’t a single miracle drug. It’s the ability to test, adapt, and iterate.

  • Adaptive timing
  • Real-time response tracking
  • Intelligent combination of therapies
  • Continuous feedback from biomarkers like ctDNA, imaging, and clinical evolution
  • Collaborative, non-hierarchical teams of clinicians, modelers, biologists, and patients

We believe that this iterative, collaborative process is far more powerful than isolated “breakthroughs.”



💡 We’re Not Building the Next Drug.

We’re rebuilding the logic of how cancer treatment is designed, tested, and adapted — in real time.

Most osteosarcoma research often resembles proprietary software:

  • Limited patient agency
  • Built behind closed doors
  • Controlled by centralized gatekeepers
  • Optimized for one-size-fits-all protocols
  • Resistant to real-time updates
  • Dependent on regulatory pipelines that can take 10–15 years



🔄 What Does “Open-Source Oncology” Mean?

  1. Start with real-world patients (like Tico) and their urgent needs
  2. Draw from multiple treatment strategies, including repurposed drugs, immune modulation, metabolic therapy, evolutionary math models, and adaptive chemotherapy
  3. Coordinate data openly, so patterns across rare cases can inform rapid iteration (rather than be buried in silos)
  4. Collaborate across borders, bypassing institutional turf wars and protocol orthodoxy
  5. Respect individual variation — not as a nuisance, but as a feature of intelligent design
  6. Test and learn, fast, through ethically sound, iterative decision-making


🧬 The Problem with Protocol Culture

Current osteosarcoma care is stuck in a protocol monoculture:

  • Treat every patient the same way (MAP), regardless of biology or response
  • Use rigid timelines
  • Delay adaptive decisions until it’s too late
  • Penalize clinicians who deviate, even when evidence suggests they should
  • Ignore novel signals — from ctDNA to immune signatures to patient recovery patterns

It’s like debugging a software crash with tools from 1993 — then blaming the user when it fails.



🔥 Our Case Is the Spark — But the Fire Is Bigger

We’re not building a competing institute. We’re launching a movement:

  • A storytelling engine (film, site, outreach) that connects families and clinicians daring to try differently
  • A networked experiment in evolving care — informed by math, data, and courage
  • A challenge to the system to ask: if childhood leukemia went from 10% to 90% survival by embracing adaptive, collaborative, evolving strategies — why hasn’t osteosarcoma?

🚀 Help Us Build the Future

This is open-source oncology.

We start with a single patient.

We invite the world to contribute.