Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-8zxtt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T11:19:22.381Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Between Prevention and Therapy: Gio Batta Gori and the National Cancer Institute’s Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme, 1974–1978

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2012

David Cantor*
Affiliation:
Office of History, National Institutes of Health, 1 Cloister Court, Building 60, Room 262, Bethesda, MD 20814-1460, USA
*
*Email address for correspondence: cantord@mail.nih.gov
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This paper explores the origins of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme (DNCP) of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and its fate under its first director, Gio Batta Gori. The DNCP is used to explore the emergence of federal support for research on diet, nutrition and cancer following the 1971 Cancer Act, the complex relations between cancer prevention and therapeutics in the NCI during the 1970s, the broader politics around diet, nutrition and cancer during that decade, and their relations to Senator George McGovern’s select committee on Nutrition and Human Needs. It also provides a window onto the debates and struggles over whether NCI research should be funded by contracts or grants, the nature of the patronage system within the federal cancer research agency, how a director, Gio Gori, lost patronage within that system and how a tightening of the budget for cancer research in the mid-to-late 1970s affected the DNCP.

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
This is a work of the US Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States.
Copyright
© The Author 2012 Published by Cambridge University Press. This is a work of the US Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States.This is a work of the US Government and is not subject to copyright protection in the United States.

The few turbulent years that Gio Batta Gori headed the National Cancer Institute’s Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme (NCI DNCP) started with high expectations of a new beginning for cancer prevention. After years of neglect, it seemed that the federal agency would take advantage of new opportunities to build on a growing body of epidemiological and experimental work that implicated diet and nutrition as causes of this group of diseases. The programme began in 1974 amid a flurry of new initiatives in cancer prevention and control. However, by 1977 it was in crisis, and in 1978 Gori left under a cloud. The DNCP might have begun with great expectations of a new beginning for cancer prevention, but these expectations were frustrated by the time that Gori left.

The story of the DNCP is often told within the NCI as part of a broader narrative of the difficult birth of federal support for cancer prevention. In this account, the NCI’s interest in cancer control initially focused on early detection and treatment.Footnote 1 Less attention focused on prevention – or, more specifically, what came to be known as ‘primary prevention’Footnote 2 – with the exception from the 1950s of smoking and tobacco. Then, in the late 1960s and 1970s this began to change. Researchers associated a growing number of occupational, environmental and lifestyle factors with cancer, and Congress and advocacy groups pressured a sometimes-reluctant NCI to devote more resources to aetiology and primary prevention (hereafter just ‘prevention’).Footnote 3 Federal support for diet and nutrition emerged with this new interest in prevention.

Prevention is only part of the story of the DNCP, however, and at times not even the main one. Its origins began with the problems of parents trying to feed their leukaemic children, and much of its funding went not on prevention, but on studies of the role of diet and nutrition in cancer therapy. Indeed, the early history of the DNCP is a microcosm of a broader struggle over research priorities in which physicians and scientists aggressively defended therapeutically related research against demands that more resources go to prevention. Such struggles, I suggest, were exacerbated by anxieties from the food and farming industries that the NCI’s interest in diet and nutrition in cancer causation might add to pressure to reduce consumption of their products on health grounds. None of this succeeded in ending prevention-related research, but it did ensure that advocates of prevention were thwarted in their more ambitious expectations of the DNCP, especially as the NCI’s budget began to tighten in the mid-1970s, and the DNCP found itself struggling against bigger, more established programmes, at the heart of NCI policy, and ever hungry for more money. The story of the DNCP is thus a tale of what happened to a marginal programme when funding got scarce, and when entrenched interests came to be threatened.

This paper has three aims. The first is to use the DNCP as a window onto the growth of federal support for research on diet, nutrition and cancer following the 1971 Cancer Act, the legislative beginning of what was sometimes known as the War on Cancer. This programme and the broader field of diet, nutrition and cancer research are largely neglected in the voluminous literature on the 1971 Act and its aftermath.Footnote 4 Nor do the general historiographies of either diet and nutrition or cancer therapeutics and prevention in the 1970s give them much attention.Footnote 5 In the case of cancer therapy, the best we have are a few internal accounts of technical developments in the nutrition of cancer patients and some comments on continued anxieties over diet as a form of ‘quack’ treatment.Footnote 6 In the case of prevention, diet and nutrition are – with two exceptions – largely subordinated to accounts of smoking and occupational and environmental cancers. One exception is a literature on additives and hormones such as diethylstilbestrol (DES) which were not the focus of the DNCP for reasons discussed below.Footnote 7 The other exception is a literature on the growing interest in diet, nutrition and cancer in the 1980s, but this last literature largely skips over the 1970s.Footnote 8 Part of the historiographic intent of this paper is to recover the missing decade of the 1970s: to explain why interest in diet, nutrition and cancer emerged during that decade, to document the range of interest in this field (beyond additives and hormones), to explore how the NCI responded to this interest and to describe why its early efforts foundered. The paper ends in 1978 when the DNCP’s first director left, and prevention and therapy separated within the programme.

The second aim of this paper is to explore the problematic relations between therapeutics and prevention within the DNCP in the 1970s. It is well known that the NCI was widely criticised during that decade for favouring therapeutics over prevention.Footnote 9 Much of the substantial historiography on this topic, however, is written from a prevention perspective in which arguments in favour of therapy tend to be portrayed as little more than barriers to prevention’s advancement. One of the goals of this paper is to recover the perspectives not only of those who advocated prevention, but also of those who advocated therapeutic research, and to show how each related to the other. The DNCP provides a valuable opportunity to explore this intertwined story. Both sides saw the programme as an opportunity to advance their research objectives, but there was never enough money to support all their proposals, and they became competitors for a limited funding pool. Yet, paradoxically, if they were competitors they were also uneasy allies. The DNCP’s marginal status within the NCI meant that the two sides were bound together in a fraught relationship as partners in preserving the programme as a whole against external threats. It was a difficult position for each. Both were forced to weigh their common interests in protecting the programme against their competing interests in securing funding from a small DNCP budget.

A third aim of the paper is to use the DNCP as a window on to the broader politics around diet, nutrition and cancer in the 1970s. The DNCP is a story of how a range of external stakeholders – with different, sometimes conflicting, interests and agendas – sought to shape NCI policy in this area. Thus, where some advocacy groups pressured Congress and the NCI for more funding for prevention, other stakeholders, such as the meat industry, worried that DNCP research might highlight public health issues that would undermine the commercial value of their products. Congress itself was divided, sometimes more willing to privilege the voices of advocates of therapeutics, sometimes those of prevention. And, within the NCI, advocates of prevention and therapeutics played up these divisions to argue political cases for their various positions, often backed up with data that they hoped would support more research in their fields and highlight the limitations of research favoured by their opponents.

This then is a story about how the fate of the programme in the 1970s was determined by the political struggles between various stakeholders, both within and without the NCI. It is also a story of how these struggles were complicated, on the one hand, by broader efforts by the NCI leadership to reform and restructure the organisation in the mid-to-late 1970s and, on the other hand, by Gio Gori, the director of the programme. Gori’s controversial efforts from 1977 to counter the DNCP’s budgetary problems, combined with his simultaneous involvement in disputes around smoking, succeeded in alienating powerful figures within the NCI. The DNCP director found himself in a hostile institutional environment, politically exposed and without allies having lost the support of former patrons during the reorganisation of the mid-to-late 1970s. Gori was eventually compelled to give up directorship of the DNCP, and his political problems helped set the stage for the growing institutional separation of therapeutics and prevention within the programme.

1974–77

The beginnings of the DNCP can be traced to one of the therapeutic ‘success’ stories of the post-war years – childhood cancer.Footnote 10 Where once a diagnosis of leukaemia had meant the death of the child, by the late 1960s and 1970s the situation was very different. Mortality from childhood leukaemia fell, children survived the disease longer and a new set of problems emerged around their long-term care. Among these problems diet and nutrition figured large. Parents found their leukaemic offspring often unable or unwilling to eat, fluctuating from skeletal to obese during the course of treatment, and their physicians often seemed at a loss to help. By the 1970s, a number of parents’ support groups had formed. One of these – the Candlelighters, based in Washington, DCFootnote 11 – was to set in motion the events that led to the creation of the DNCP.

The Candlelighters was the inspiration of Grace Ann Monaco (also known as Grace Powers Monaco), a young attorney in Washington, DC.Footnote 12 In 1968 her daughter, Kathleen Rea, was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and began treatment at Children’s National Medical Center. There Monaco met parents of other children undergoing treatment, and – encouraged by the paediatrician Sanford Leiken and other physicians and nurses at Children’sFootnote 13 – together they formed a support group for parents of children with cancer. Monaco later recalled: ‘About 25 of us started meeting wherever we could find space – boiler rooms, corridors outside the emergency room – and Candlelighters was born.’Footnote 14 The parents lobbied Congress on issues such as better access to paediatric clinical trials, the establishment of a national comprehensive cancer registry for childhood and adolescent cancers, and outreach programmes for the demonstration of successful methods of treating those cancers.Footnote 15 The organisation also gained a reputation for its support of greater federal involvement in research, and for its ability to present practical suggestions on how this might be achieved in Congress.Footnote 16 One of the founding members, Richard (Dick) Sullivan, was a congressional staffer, which facilitated access to legislators. Sullivan’s daughter had a neuroblastoma and died in 1970, the same year as Kathleen Rea. The Candlelighters’ ‘birth’ – also in 1970 – came out of these personal tragedies.

The Candlelighters expanded beyond the Washington area. ‘Our traveling members really got the ball rolling’, Monaco later noted of members who visited children’s hospitals across the country.Footnote 17 ‘We talked about the importance of parent-peer support and networked with parents across the US and Canada.’ To build and maintain their network, Monaco and Julie Sullivan, Dick’s wife, founded a newsletter in 1970, written with the help of other parents, and printed on the House of Representatives’ mimeograph machine. The number of local Candlelighters groups jumped from perhaps three in the early 1970s to over 100 by the end of the decade, in 42 states, and in Europe and Canada.Footnote 18 By then the organisation had also developed what it called the Childhood Cancer Ombudsman Programme that used panels of volunteer doctors and lawyers to give free opinions on issues such as treatment choices, informed consent, employment discrimination against parents, educational discrimination, access to military service and barriers to insurance. In 1976, the Candlelighters created a Foundation to promote self-help groups, to improve communications between parents and parents’ groups, and to enhance the quality of information available to parents of children with cancer.Footnote 19

The poor quality of information available to parents had been a concern of the Candlelighters long before the establishment of the Foundation.Footnote 20 During debates over extending the 1971 National Cancer Programme, the organisation persuaded the House Sub-Committee on Health and the Environment headed by Paul Rogers (D-Fla) to write into the section of the bill authorising NCI information programmes a statement that such programmes should include ‘information respecting nutrition programs for cancer patients and the relationship between nutrition and cancer’. It was this proposed authorisation that marks the beginning of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme. At some point in the Congressional deliberations the terms of the authorisation expanded, and under the National Cancer Amendment enacted 23 July 1974 (P.L. 93-352) Congress ordered the NCI to increase its support for research into the role of nutrition in both the cause and treatment of cancer.Footnote 21 By November 1974, the first plans for what would become the DNCP were set out, and the programme was launched the following year.Footnote 22

The Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme

The DNCP might have started as an appeal for more nutritional information from parents trying to feed their sick children, but it had turned into much more. In 1974, the director of the NCI, Frank J. Rauscher, appointed an internal committee of NCI scientists – the Diet Nutrition and Cancer Coordinating Group (DNCCG) – to define the goals of this programme and to recommend an organisational structure. The DNCCG interpreted the 1974 Cancer Act as calling for a two-pronged programme in diet and nutrition focused on information provision and research, the latter including studies on cancer aetiology and on the treatment, long-term management and rehabilitation of cancer patients. (Hereafter treatment, management and rehabilitation will be abbreviated to therapy.)Footnote 23 Towards these ends, the DNCP began a literature survey on diet, nutrition and cancer, and organised two workshops in 1975 – one on diet in cancer therapy,Footnote 24 the other on nutrition and cancer causation.Footnote 25 These shifts towards therapy and aetiology seem to have had the approval of the Candlelighters, which remained a strong supporter of the programme throughout the 1970s, pressing the NCI to increase nutrition research.Footnote 26 In 1979, the NCI fulfilled a debt to the Candlelighters by producing a dietary resource book for parents of children with cancer.Footnote 27

Table 1: Gio Batta Gori’s appointments prior to joining NCI. Source: Gio Batta Gori, Resume (June 1968), NCI archives: item number DC-6800-006346.

To get the DNCP going the NCI began by appointing a programme director and an advisory committee. The directorship went to Gio Batta Gori, then deputy director of the NCI’s Division of Cancer Causes and Prevention (DCCP), see Figure 1.Footnote 28 Today, Gori is a controversial figure in part because of his subsequent career as a consultant to the tobacco industry, and critics have questioned his scientific and management credentials. Richard Kluger, for example, describes Gori as a ‘journeyman microbiologist’ whose ‘medical training had been at a backwater school, he had no scholarly publications to speak of, and he brought no depth of knowledge on the nuances of cancer’.Footnote 29 And Devra Davis adds to Kluger’s criticism. ‘What Gori lacked in scientific pedigrees at the time, he more than made up for in schmoozing ability’, she claims, ‘many of his colleagues found him to be an overdressed bureaucrat with an exaggerated sense of his own importance’.Footnote 30 But such evaluations seem to have come in part from critics within the NCI. For others within that organisation, Gori seems to have gained a reputation as an effective administrator.

Figure 1: Gio Batta Gori, c1975. Source: ‘Dr. Gio Gori Becomes Dep. Director of Cancer Cause, Prevention Div.’, The NIH Record, 27, 1 (14 January 1975), 7, courtesy of Rich McManus, editor of The NIH Record.

Born in Tarcento, Italy, Gori had trained in microbiology and botany at the University of Camerino, see Table 1. In 1959/60 he moved to Pittsburgh to work with Jonas Salk on the poliovirus. He returned briefly to Italy to establish a laboratory to produce polio vaccine in Siena, before re-crossing the Atlantic to join Hilary Koprowski, the microbiologist director of the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia. After the Wistar, Gori worked in private industry before joining the NCI in 1968, where he gained a reputation as an efficient manager, someone able to get along with most people. As we shall see, this reputation would be in tatters by the time he left NCI. At least in the beginning, however, it is likely that it was his good managerial reputation, more than his modest scientific accomplishments, that explains why he quickly moved up the administrative ladder. From 1973 to 1980, he was (Acting) Deputy Director of the DCCP, with simultaneous responsibilities as Director of the Smoking and Health Programme (1973–c.78), and Acting (Associate) Director of the Carcinogenesis Programme (1976–77). He was to be Director of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme from 1975 to c.1978 (Figure 2).Footnote 31

The advisory committee met for the first time on 19–20 August 1975. Chaired by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) toxicologist, Gerald Wogan, the committee was eventually named the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Advisory Committee – hereafter the DNCAC or the Advisory Committee (Table 2). According to Gori, the DNCAC was intended to reflect a cross section of scientific expertise in epidemiology, experimental carcinogenesis, animal nutrition, human clinical nutrition, the biochemistry of nutrition and clinical oncology, as well as the federal government, the academic community, industry, the American Cancer Society (ACS) and other interests.Footnote 32 Yet from the start there were tensions within it. In part, the issue was the division of power between Gori (as Director of the programme) and the Committee that advised him. The substantive problem, however, was how to divide the US$5000 000 (later US$6000 000) allotted to the programme between research on therapeutics and aetiology. To the dismay of advocates of therapeutics, Gori submitted a plan in which research on aetiology and therapy would each have 45% of the budget of the new programme – the remaining 10% going on general support.Footnote 33 (Table 3) It was this plan that marks the beginning of the struggle over research priorities within DNCP, pitting advocates of therapeutically related research against those who promoted prevention and aetiology.

Table 2: Members of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme Advisory Committee.

Table 3: Gori’s proposed breakdown of the budget for DNCP, August 1975 (% percentage of the total DNCP budget). Source: ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero in on Mass of Data, Plan Contract and Grant Project Areas’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 35 (29 August 1975), 1–6: 2–3.

Diet and Therapy

Advocates of therapy argued there were pressing clinical reasons why they needed more resources than Gori proposed. They pointed out that the disease itself could cause malnutrition (through anorexia, hormonal disturbances or by other unknown mechanisms); that the resulting nutritional deficiencies could enhance or retard tumour growth directly, or through their effects on the immune system, or on drug absorption and metabolism; that the frequent presence of acute infection created further nutritional complications by increasing the basic metabolic expenditure by 30–40%; and that nutritional problems could also be caused or aggravated by cancer treatment, sometimes the result of the anorexia, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea which could follow chemotherapy or radiotherapy, and sometimes the result of depletion by antimetabolite therapy (see Table 4).Footnote 34 However, despite numerous reports indicating that dietary factors might play a critical role in cancer treatment, commentators noted that there were few definitive studies on the contribution of diet to the clinical management of cancer. The complexity of the relationships among tumour, host and diet/nutrition made reproducible results difficult to obtain.Footnote 35

Table 4: Consequences of cancer treatment predisposing to nutrition problems. Source: Maurice E. Shils, ‘Nutritional Problems Arising from the Treatment of Cancer’, CA. A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 20 (1970), 188–96: 193.

For many physicians, research into the role of diet and nutrition in cancer had particular urgency because of the anorexia and cachexia associated with the disease. Anorexia was a frequent problem in the treatment of cancer. It could persist for such a long time that the patient lost a huge amount of body weight, became malnourished and was less able to counteract the complicating factors of cancer, or to endure aggressive anti-cancer therapies such as radiation, surgery or chemotherapy. According to one estimate, about two-thirds of those who died of cancer were cachectic at death.Footnote 36 In some cases, the anorexia and cachexia seemed to be the result of reduced food intake, either because patients with cancer found it painful to eat or because they found their food to be much less palatable – the disease or its treatments sometimes seemed to affect taste and smell. In other cases, the anorexia or cachexia seemed to have little to do with food intake. Some patients continued to lose weight even when they ate and appeared to assimilate a normal diet, perhaps because the tumour pre-empted available nutrients, or because the host underwent an increased metabolic rate – scientists disagreed on the reason. In addition, some studies showed that food restriction generally inhibited tumour growth, lending support to suggestions that the cachexia might be an adaptive device of the host to starve the tumour. It was, therefore, possible that improving patient food intake would actually accelerate the growth of the tumour, and improve its viability and resistance to therapy.

For the DNCAC, such concerns opened a series of possible research projects, including studies of the nature of host–tumour competition, the causes of impaired food intake, the role of individual nutrients as they related to cancer treatment (including nutrient depletion by therapy) and the activities of enzymes involved in the metabolism of cancer chemotherapeutic agents. The Advisory Committee considered studies on why modified taste perception occurred, and discussed proposals for research to develop means for restoring normal taste patterns, to modify traditional tastes of foods so that they became palatable again and to change patient’s behaviours so that they increased food intake.Footnote 37 It also considered research into artificial methods of feeding (for those cases where conventional feeding was impossible) to improve the formulation of nutrient solutions, to reduce costs, to improve hardware, to reduce the chance of sepsis and to devise low-cost, mass-produced portable infusion units for ambulatory patients. The latter research was of particular interest to two members of the DNCAC, Jonathan Rhoads and Stanley Dudrick. In 1968, they had developed a technique of total parenteral nutrition (TNP) that became a standard American technique for providing patients with long-term nutritional support.Footnote 38

A final problem focused on the question of whether nutrition could be used as a direct form of cancer therapy. The recognition that the nutritional requirements of many tumours were quite different to those of the host – the patient – opened the prospect of adjusting available nutrients so as to starve the tumour while feeding the patient.Footnote 39 In addition, it was also possible that therapy might be based on the interruption of the cachexia, rather than the inhibition of the tumour, especially in the early stages of tumour growth before frank emaciation set in.Footnote 40

So far I have suggested that calls for research into the relations between diet, nutrition and cancer therapy were motivated, in part, by a series of clinical and scientific questions related to the practical problems of cancer therapy. These technical questions were given political urgency by growing public concern in the 1960s and 1970s of poor survival rates for patients undergoing therapy.Footnote 41 Despite years of research and millions of dollars, critics argued that survival rates had not significantly improved since the Second World War. For physicians these figures were confirmation of the need for more research into methods of improving cancer therapy, but they also raised a new quandary. Increasingly such figures were also used to argue that cancer research was too focused on therapeutics and basic laboratory studies, and that a fundamental reorientation towards prevention was needed. For therapists, all this gave new importance to research that promised practical methods of improving survival rates. Studies of artificial nutrition, direct nutritional therapy, and the role of diet and nutrition in the host/tumour relationship were particularly promising here, they claimed.

Yet, until the creation of the DNCP, the NCI seemed more focused on other research areas, and there seemed little prospect of change. As Gori noted, nutrition science was often poorly provided for in the medical schools, and tainted with the mark of quackery, not the sort of field that the NCI would generally support.Footnote 42 Practitioners interested in nutritional issues – nurses, nutritionists and others – were often low status and without a strong voice on the NCI. The Candlelighters’ initiative had improved the prospects for change and money for a host of new projects seemed a possibility. Yet with all these new possibilities came the unwelcome probability of having to share a small budget with researchers more interested in preventing cancer in the future than in dealing with the urgent needs of desperately ill patients in the 1970s. Whatever their sympathy for prevention, physicians remained focused on their sick patients, and anxious that money might disappear into a seemingly bottomless hole of aetiological research that offered little prospect of reducing cancer incidence or mortality for many years, if ever.

Diet as a Cause of Cancer

If advocates of therapeutically related research argued that their needs were pressing, so too did those interested in prevention. During the 1950s and especially the 1960s a growing body of epidemiological and experimental evidence had implicated diet and nutrition as causes of cancer. But – as with therapeutics – advocates of prevention argued that much more research was needed. In their view, the nature of the relationship between diet and nutrition was poorly understood, in part because of the historical neglect of prevention-related research, the technical difficulties of research in this area and the poor status of nutrition as a scientific field. The DNCP offered an opportunity to reverse such neglect at a time when public and Congressional concern about the NCI’s failure to promote prevention was growing. ‘Prevention is the only way we can make a major impact on survival’, commented the epidemiologist, Ernst Wynder, at the first meeting of the DNCAC,Footnote 43 ‘As interesting as therapy is, it will not make a major inroad on cancer…[it] has never wiped out a disease’.

Wynder’s was the strongest voice on the DNCAC arguing for more research into the cancer aetiology.Footnote 44 Best known for identifying cigarette smoking as a cause of lung cancer, Wynder became convinced that diet was a significant cause of this group of diseases, and that prevention was undervalued by the cancer establishment and often opposed by powerful industrial interests.Footnote 45 In 1969 he founded the American Health Foundation, eventually based in Valhalla north of New York City, to research cancer aetiology and prevention, including epidemiological and animal research in nutrition.Footnote 46 He told the committee that he thought about half of all cancers were nutrition related. According to Wynder, occupational cancers accounted for about 1% of the total, tobacco for 40% of cancers in males and, as he put it, ‘Most of the rest are related to nutrition’.Footnote 47

Wynder’s evidence for this statement derived from epidemiological studies of migrant populations that had blossomed in the 1960s, pioneered in part by NCI statisticians such as William Haenszel. Differences in colon, stomach, breast, kidney and bladder cancer rates between Japan and the US, he argued, had been attributed, to dietary differences.Footnote 48 Cancer rates in Puerto Rico were similar to those in Japan, and second-generation Puerto Rican migrants, like Japanese migrants, adopted a US diet and soon experienced cancer rates similar to the rest of the US. Had he wished to, Wynder could also have pointed to other studies – for example, among Polish migrants to the US, and rural migrants to Cali, ColombiaFootnote 49 – that showed that cancer incidence patterns of migrants changed from that of their native country/region to that common to the population of their new country/region; a transition often attributed to changes in dietary habits. Other studies of populations with special dietary practices, Wynder noted, showed positive evidence of a dietary relationship to cancer aetiology – Jewish populations in New York, Seventh-Day Adventists in California and the Mormon populations of Utah.Footnote 50 In migration studies, diet was difficult to disentangle from other environmental factors. These other studies offered an opportunity to control environmental factors: they focused on populations that lived in the same environment, but differed principally in terms of diet.

Such studies were not the first to link diet and cancer.Footnote 51 Yet earlier studies had remarkably little impact on the national cancer campaigns that emerged in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Dominated by physicians and scientists who tended to see cancer as a local cellular disease that subsequently spread to affect other parts of the body, such campaigns tended to focus efforts to control the disease on early detection and treatment.Footnote 52 Very little attention was paid to dietary causes of cancer or dietary means of preventing cancer, which were regarded as of unproven value and, like direct nutritional therapy, associated with quackery.Footnote 53 The creation of the NCI in 1937 did little to change the picture.Footnote 54 The new Institute broadly endorsed the model of early detection and treatment, and tended to share with other cancer control agencies a suspicion of claims that diet caused cancer. The Institute did support a small amount of research on diet and nutrition, notably Albert Tannenbaum’s important studies in the late 1930s and 1940s on the effects of caloric restriction on the development of spontaneous and chemically induced tumours in mice.Footnote 55 However, diet and nutrition were never central to its mission. According to Michael Shimkin, its intramural efforts in this area faded after 1950, paradoxically just as Wynder and others elsewhere began to take an interest in the subject.Footnote 56 Then, in the 1960s and especially the 1970s, the NCI’s disinterest in diet and nutrition came to be challenged by growing public and political interest in environmental and lifestyle causes of cancer and a growing acceptance within medicine of statistical associations as evidence of causal relations, notably following epidemiological research undertaken in the 1940s that identified cigarette smoking as a cause of lung cancer.Footnote 57 Such studies laid a foundation for the reception of studies of migrant and other populations that identified associations between diet and cancer.

This is not to say that the growing interest in environmental and lifestyle factors was unproblematic for the DNCP. As Robert Proctor has noted, much of the interest in environmental cancers in the 1970s focused not on diet and nutrition but on occupational cancers,Footnote 58 and where interest did focus on diet it often focused on subjects such as pesticides and additives that were beyond the remit of the DNCP.Footnote 59 It has already been noted that Wynder dismissed occupational cancers as a tiny proportion of cancers (1%), and he was similarly dismissive of additives and pesticides. Wynder argued that there were three major dietary factors in relation to cancer: food contaminants (which he regarded as the least important), specific nutritional deficiencies or imbalances, and specific nutritional excesses or imbalances notably in regard to fat and alcohol consumption (which he regarded as the most important). In his view, there was already enough evidence for the committee to advise the public to ‘reduce the total calories, reduce the calories from fat, and reduce the cholesterol intake’.Footnote 60

But, if Wynder had hoped for support from the DNCAC, he was to be disappointed. Even supporters of prevention on the committee were not persuaded of his arguments about dietary imbalances. Gori, for example, noted that there was very little scientific evidence as to what constituted a normal human diet, ‘rendering irrelevant talk of dietary excesses and deficiencies’.Footnote 61 In his view, it would only be possible to talk about excesses and deficiencies once the normalcy ranges for the human diet were known. This information, Gori claimed, combined with epidemiological studies, dietary surveys and exploratory studies in animals could help define the epidemiological significance and eventually the carcinogenic potential of altered dietary intake in humans. But the range of questions was immense – what was the impact of diet on the hormonal balance, internal secretions, the composition and substrates available to the enteric flora, and the carcinogenic and toxic stimuli that might intervene on cellular and genetic stability, the immune status, the detoxification and reproductive competence of the individual. There were so many unknowns about the relationship between cancer, nutrition and diet, and it was likely to take years to sort out.

It was here that the political weakness of prevention-related research was evident. While Congress was a strong advocate of such research, it was notoriously impatient for results, and spoke with more than one voice, pressing for a cure for the disease as much as (if not more than) it pressed for prevention. Critics of prevention were quick to highlight the point. ‘We could quickly use up $6 million in etiology, and it would be years before we could show progress’, noted the surgeon Stanley Dudrick,Footnote 62 ‘The legislators might become discouraged’. Dudrick and other critics argued that therapeutic-related research would provide quicker results than prevention;Footnote 63 that it was too early to reach conclusions on the relationship of diet to cancer;Footnote 64 that a focus on prevention might undermine efforts to do something for people whose cancers had already started;Footnote 65 and that the workshops sponsored by DNCP in 1975 came up with many more promising research ideas in therapy than in aetiology. The surgeon, Jonathan Rhoads (the Chair of the National Cancer Advisory Board), was moved to regret the poor showing of aetiology: nine of the top ten projects were in therapy or management and support, he noted.Footnote 66

Faced with such arguments, Gori retreated from his earlier position on prevention. He conceded that therapeutic research was likely to have a faster pay-off than that of aetiology, and that they had to show quick results if legislators were not to become discouraged. Congress had, he argued, been motivated to include diet and nutrition in the 1974 Act more by a concern about therapy than by statistics on aetiology. The epidemiological evidence, he noted, pointed to a variety of causative factors, but it pointed to too many things, and there was a consensus that the epidemiological approach to aetiology would be slow and difficult. By the end of the debate, the therapeutic lobby had prevailed. Instead, of Gori’s proposal of a budget split of 45%–45%–10%, the Advisory Committee recommended that the budget be divided 55% for therapy; 35% for aetiology and 10% for programme management and support.Footnote 67 In practice, therapeutics got an even larger slice of the cake: the actual funding in the fiscal year 1976 was 67.4% for therapy, 25.4% for aetiology and 7.2% for management and support, with the largest percentage increase going to work on artificial alimentation.Footnote 68 (Table 5) In the following years Congressional pressure would increase the percentage going to prevention.Footnote 69 The base-line from which future negotiations would start, however, had been set.

Table 5: ‘DNCP Recommended and Actual Funds Allocation, Fiscal Year 1976’. Source: Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, Status Report and Working Papers for the Advisory Committee Meeting December 14–15, 1976, National Institutes of Health, Building 31, Wing C, Conference Room 10, Bethesda Maryland 20014 (Bethesda: National Cancer Program, 1976), 12.

1977–78

So far the story of the DNCP is a tale of internal committee struggles over NCI research priorities in which epidemiologists and statisticians defended prevention-related research against pressure for more resources to go on therapeutics – and found themselves giving ground. But from 1977 these struggles moved out of the committee rooms and into a broader public arena. Frustrated with their poor showing against the therapists, and upset by NCI cutbacks in spending on diet and nutrition, advocates of prevention began a political and media campaign critical of NCI neglect of prevention research. This revitalised campaign brought the DNCP into the sights of the food industry, which was increasingly concerned about the direction of federal food policy. It also alienated senior figures within the NCI with its public criticism of their policies towards prevention. These problems, combined with Gori’s involvement in the separate debates over smoking, meant the DNCP faced a very unclear future.

Budget Problems

The DNCP had been established when the NCI was flush with money for small new projects in the early 1970s. Its budget had jumped after the 1971 Act, from US$190 million in 1970 to just under US$1 billion in 1977, allowing the NCI to initiate a range of new programmes, including the DNCP.Footnote 70 By 1977, the golden days were over. The budget continued to rise, but the money was draining out elsewhere, notably to the Comprehensive Cancer Centres (established across the country from 1973 to bring results of research rapidly to patients), and to the Special Virus Cancer Programme.Footnote 71 Other programmes began to feel the financial pinch. The NCI – under funding pressure from the Ford and Carter administrations – cut Gori’s proposed budget in half.Footnote 72

Gori reported in 1977 that funding limitations meant that the DNCP had not been able to implement many research recommendations of its Advisory Committee.Footnote 73 Congress had allocated US$6 million to the DNCP in 1975 rising to US$7.7 million in 1977. The problem was that these sums did not come close to meeting the needs of the programme. Gori estimated that proposed projects would cost about US$25 570 000, with about 103 projects needing support, and no-one knew where the money was to come from. Despite early concerns that few scientists would be interested in such a low status area of research as nutrition and diet, Gori had found himself deluged by enquiries and proposals for research at a time when the NCI faced a financial shortfall.Footnote 74 Nutrition research seemed to be caught between its own success and the general budget crunch. It was not the only NCI programme to suffer this way, but Gori took the difficulties to heart.

Frustrated with his inability to change NCI policy, in February 1977 Gori and his Advisory Committee went over the heads of NCI bosses, and wrote to the newly inaugurated President Carter and key congressional figures to complain about poor funding.Footnote 75 The previous month, Newsday had published a 16-day series of articles critical of the NCI’s war on cancer.Footnote 76 The nub of the Newsday criticism was that the NCI was losing the war on cancer, that too much emphasis was given to the virus programme and comprehensive cancer centres at the expense of more promising areas of research including prevention and that a reason for this was that the NCI’s peer review system and its advisory committee – the National Advisory Committee on Cancer – were loaded with people who were the recipients of funding and few had an interest in prevention, including diet and nutrition.Footnote 77 In short, NCI decision-making was rife with conflicts of interest that worked against promoting work in the most productive areas. Gori was one of Newsday’s sources.

According to Newsday, Gori charged that the heavy emphasis on virus research and treatment centres was a misuse of federal funds: the scientific consensus was that virus research was no longer the best route to a cure (the virus programme was ‘a flop’, an unnamed scientist was quoted by Newsday); nor was the focus on therapy the best route to reducing cancer incidence or mortality. In spite of the enormous increase in treatment money, the survival rates of cancer victims – except for some cancers in children – had not increased substantially in 30 years. How different the prospects seemed for prevention. Gori noted that the evidence was that the majority of cancers were environmentally produced and could be prevented. ‘In spite of this clear evidence’, Gori was quoted as saying, ‘the money is not where the priorities are’.Footnote 78

Public criticism set the seal on a growing rift between Gori and his NCI superiors. As one report put it later, ‘Going public with an intramural fight over the budget is a no-no in the federal government’.Footnote 79 Gori’s comments in Newsday, and the DNCAC’s approach to Carter, attracted the ire of Benno Schmidt (Chairman of the President’s Cancer Panel) and Guy Newell (the NCI’s acting director: Frank Rauscher having left to join the ACS, 1 November 1976). Newell began by publicly warning (unnamed) Advisory Committees not to engage in lobbying.Footnote 80 Then, in April 1977, he cut all of Gori’s advisory committees – the carcinogenesis, tobacco, and diet and nutrition committees.Footnote 81

The Carter administration – which had run on a promise of reducing the size of the federal government – had urged the NCI to reduce the number of its advisory groups. (Advisory group members were considered FTEs – full-time equivalents – and were an immediate target for downsizing.) Newell denied that his focus on Gori was retribution for the Diet and Nutrition Cancer Advisory Committee’s action, but commentators saw a connection.Footnote 82 Without the DNCAC, Gori was unable to use it to critique ongoing research or to generate new research priorities. One former member of the Advisory committee came to worry that it left the NCI inadequately advised on nutrition issues, a sign of its lack of commitment to the field.Footnote 83 At the same time, a shift in the NCI’s funding mechanisms – from contracts to grants – further reduced Gori’s ability to control diet and nutrition research.

Academic researchers had pushed hard for this shift, since grants were investigator initiated and gave more influence to the researchers than government administrators. From the point of view of researchers, contract mechanisms were vulnerable to favouritism, a means of extending the National Institutes for Health (NIH) intramural research without a proper review, potentially harmful to cancer research (research, they claimed, often targeted areas where basic knowledge about cancer was underdeveloped), and based on a flawed ‘philosophy that the role of management of fundamental science is the same as the role of management for engineering or development when the fundamental knowledge is available’.Footnote 84 By contrast, from the point of view of administrators, contracts were a convenient and quick means of promoting work in targeted areas, of differentiating programme objectives from scientific objectives and of maintaining management control over scientists who, in administrators’ views, often confused scientific and programmatic endpoints. As one DCCP document put it, advocating management through a mix of contracts and grants: ‘[M]any scientists do not understand that even successful completion of their proposed project may not necessarily contribute to the attainment of program goals’.Footnote 85 Contracts had the added benefit, for administrators, that they could be initiated without undergoing the sorts of review that was expected of grants. This is not to say that contracts were not subject to peer review: they were, but in different ways to grants. The 1974 amendments to the National Cancer Act required research and development contract proposals to be subject to peer review by groups composed of not less than 75% of non-federal employees.Footnote 86

In 1976 the vast bulk of therapeutic research was carried out by contract (65.9% of the total DNCP budget distribution), which included all the research on artificial alimentation and anorexia. By contrast 1.5% of the budget went on therapeutic research funded through cancer research emphasis grants (CREGs), a targeted grant established in the mid-1970s that aimed to replace some of the work done under contract. The equivalent figures for aetiology were 8.6% of total budget distribution on contracts and 16.8% on CREGs. With the appointment of Arthur Upton as NCI director, on 29 July 1977, all this was about to change. The NCI underwent a major reorganisation in 1978 in which Upton sought to separate programme management from grant and contract administration, and from the peer review of grants and contracts. Resources were diverted to fund more investigator-initiated grants, and heads of internal NCI research programmes were banned from wielding direct control over how funds were to be awarded to extramural investigators. Such developments limited the autonomy of the DNCP, which would have less independence than formally.Footnote 87

To complicate matters further, with the NCI in limbo searching for a new director before Upton’s appointment, the Director of the NIH, Donald Frederickson, attempted to reassert NIH authority over the NCI, lost after the 1971 Act, when the director of NCI had been made a direct Presidential appointee. (Before 1971, the director of NCI, like other directors at the NIH, had operated under authority delegated to him by the Surgeon General.) Part of the problem for Gori was that in 1975 the NIH established its own Nutrition Coordinating Committee (NCC).Footnote 88 Gori was a member of this committee, but he came to suspect that NIH was not particularly sympathetic to the difficulties faced by the NCI’s programme, since the NCC allowed the NIH to assert authority over the DNCP by integrating it into an overall set of NIH priorities in nutrition.Footnote 89 Things did not get much better for Gori with the appointment of Upton. While Upton was able to reassert NCI’s independence of NIH, he fired Gori’s boss at the DCCP, James Peters, and replaced him with an acting director, Gregory O’Conor, who eventually became director in April 1978.Footnote 90 Gori remained deputy director of DCCP, but rumours circulated that O’Conor wanted to choose his own deputy.Footnote 91

McGovern

Gori’s position in the NCI might have weakened, but he retained support in Congress, notably from Senator George McGovern (D-SD) who chaired a select committee on Nutrition and Human Needs.Footnote 92 Originally created in July 1968 to lead the ‘war’ against hunger among the nation’s young, old and poor, the committee later broadened its focus to include more controversial areas of food policy such as the role of diet in promoting chronic and degenerative diseases, including cancer. In 1976 the committee began a series of hearings, labelled ‘Diet Related to Killer Diseases’, which Gori allegedly shocked when he told it in August 1976 that diet might be related to more than half of all cancers in women and one-third of all cancers in men.Footnote 93 (He and Wynder published revised figures the following year, suggesting that about 60% of cancers in women and 40% in men might be diet related.Footnote 94) In 1977 the Committee released six dietary goals for the Nation: to increase carbohydrate consumption, and reduce the consumption of fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, sugar and salt. Briefly put, the committee sought to encourage people to eat more fruit, vegetables, whole grains, poultry and fish; to reduce their consumption of meat, eggs and foods high in fat, butterfat, sugar and salt; and to abandon whole milk in favour of non-fat milk. The report received a mixed reception from dieticians and nutrition scientists. Protests by the meat, egg, sugar and dairy industries forced McGovern to issue revised (and to these industries, less draconian) goals later in the year.Footnote 95

With the food industry alerted to its activities, in June 1978, the subcommittee on Nutrition undertook hearings into the diet and nutrition programme, under the chairmanship of McGovern, and with the support of the republican senator for Kansas, Bob Dole.Footnote 96 Gori did not provide evidence to the committee, but it was clear that it largely backed his position. As McGovern put it, about half of all cancers were linked to nutrition, and yet the NCI only spent about 1% of its funds on diet and cancer research and there appeared to be no prospect of an increase. In his view, the virus programme was not producing the results it promised, and stagnant survival figures for treatment did not support the NCI’s continued emphasis on therapeutic research.Footnote 97 Picking up on issues raised by Newsday, members of McGovern’s committee attacked the NCI for conflicts of interest in its review process that worked against nutrition research, and highlighted the neglect of nutrition in the medical schools, including Arthur Upton’s former institution, the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Called before the Committee, Upton was repeatedly put on the defensive, forced to regret the neglect of nutrition in the medical schools and to confess that the NCI had difficulty in knowing exactly how much it spent on nutrition. He also conceded that controls on spending were inadequate, that the NCI did not do enough in the field and that it would seek more for nutrition research.Footnote 98

Upton’s difficulties with the McGovern Committee can have done little to endear Gori to the NCI director. Gori’s close connections to McGovern were well-known: he was a regular advisor to McGovern, as well as to Dole and another congressional supporter, the former presidential candidate, Hubert Humphrey. The difficulty for Gori was that these connections were becoming as much a liability as a help. Dole was rising in the Republican Party, but McGovern’s political star was on the wane after the problems of the Nutrition committee’s 1977 report, and Humphrey was dying of cancer.Footnote 99

Then, in August 1978, Gori sealed his political fate on a completely separate issue, when he and Cornelius Lynch published an article that sought to quantify ‘less hazardous’ levels of smoking by calculating the number of cigarettes of different brands that could theoretically be smoked without exceeding what they called critical levels for six major toxic smoke components. A report in the Washington Post that Gori and Lynch had identified safe or tolerable cigarettes generated a public storm. The article not only angered his bosses at NCI, but also drew the ire of the Surgeon General, the ACS and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) Secretary Joseph Califano, then in the midst of an anti-smoking campaign.Footnote 100 The article was the end of what influence Gori retained at NCI, and by September 1978 he had effectively lost control of all his programmes. Gori remained as DCCP deputy director, but he went to Johns Hopkins University to do a Master of Public Health (MPH) degree, a move widely seen as removing him from significant power within NCI.Footnote 101

Thus, after a volatile four years, Gori was gone. With his MPH in hand, he returned to his position as Deputy Director of the DCCP, but without many of his former responsibilities. He left the NCI in 1980, joined the Franklin Institute with a US$400 000 endowment from the Brown and Williamson Tobacco Company, and later worked as a consultant to the company in its legal cases.Footnote 102 The DNCP, which had been administered by the Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention, was reorganised and decentralised (Figures 3a and 3b). The DNCP itself was transferred to the Office of the Director of NCI, and programme development was devolved to the divisions under the umbrella of the DNCP.Footnote 103 Put another way, the new DNCP would co-ordinate but not direct the nutrition work of the Division of Cancer Treatment (DCT), the DCCP and the Division of Cancer Control and Rehabilitation. This structure was in line with Upton’s broader reorganisational goal of separating programme management from grant and contract administration, and from the peer review of grants and contracts.

Figure 2: NCI offices, divisions and programmes associated with the DNCP, 1974–78

Figure 3: Structure and framework of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme, 1978. Figures (a) and (b) provide two snapshots of the DNCP structure and framework as it evolved in 1978. Both illustrate the decentralisation of the programme after Newell took over, components of the programme being developed within the three divisions rather than by the DNCP Director. Figure (a) illustrates the structure of the DNCP as it was envisaged by Newell shortly after he took over in 1978, and includes the individuals responsible for the diet and nutrition research within each division, as well as the DCRRC (Division of Cancer Research Resources and Centres), the division responsible for managing NCI grant supported activities, including the review and coordination of programmes such as DNCP. Figure (b), which was published about the same time, provides a slightly different structure, and may be a later iteration, and sets out the research areas of each division and the relation of the DNCP to the NCI director. The absence of the DCRRC should not be taken as indicating that it had no review function in relation to the DNCP. Sources: Figure (a) Guy Newell, ‘Presentation to the National Cancer Advisory Board’, 18 September 1978, NCI archives: item number PB003861. The full names of the directors/officials are Guy R. Newell, Mildred Ellison, Thaddeus J. Domanski, Daniel L. Kisner and Lawrence D. Burke. There is no original paper copy of this document, and the quality of the PDF/photocopy image is very poor. This image has been enhanced for clarity by Hank Grasso. Figure (b) Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program. Status Report. September 1978 (Bethesda, MD: Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, September 1978), 26.

Upton gave the job of programme coordinator to Gori’s nemesis, Guy Newell, who shortly after turned it over to Diane Fink, the head since 1974 of the NCI’s Division of Cancer Control and Rehabilitation. ‘I view my role as one of management rather than direction. The direction will come from within the major NCI Divisions’,Footnote 104 Newell noted in September 1978, discussing the role of the ‘director’ within the new decentralised DNCP structure (Figure 3). Newell also announced that whereas in the past much of the research supported by the DNCP had been funded under contracts, in FY 1979 grants would be emphasised as the means of funding research. Contracts would be used for a much more limited range of activities, not generally including research.Footnote 105

Prevention and Therapy

In a series of articles written in the 1970s, the Washington Post journalist, Daniel S. Greenberg, attacked the NCI for favouring basic research and cures rather than studies of environmental causes of cancer.Footnote 106 Behind such an emphasis, Greenberg detected the hidden hand of the ACS, the major non-profit organisation concerned with cancer. In his view, the ACS (dominated by physicians interested in cancer therapy) exploited its extensive social and business connections to overwhelm a politically timid NCI. The result, according to him, was that most of the NCI’s money went either on therapeutic research or on work on cancer causation that was unlikely to upset any significant political or business constituency, with the possible exception of the tobacco industry. By contrast, studies of environmental carcinogens were politically much more difficult, since many were produced by powerful industrial corporations. The point was particularly significant in the case of diet and nutrition. As evidence mounted about the carcinogenic effects of pesticides, food additives and diets high in meat or certain fats and sugars, the farming and food-processing industries began to become alarmed. Greenberg saw such interests – combined with the low status of nutrition science and elitism within NIH – behind federal neglect of nutrition research.Footnote 107 Whatever the truth of Greenberg’s assertions, he was repeatedly able to force the NCI to issue rebuttals to his attacks. In 1977, a world-weary NIH director forwarded one Greenberg article to the NCI director congratulating him ‘on being considered worthy of a despairing sigh by Daniel S. Cassandra’.Footnote 108

Greenberg’s analysis would have found many supporters within the DNCP, and it captures and elaborates one of the themes of this essay – the uneasy birth of federal support for cancer prevention in the 1970s. But if this essay is a story of the problems of prevention research, it is also story of the problems of therapeutics. It tells the tale of how growing public criticism of the NCI in the 1960s and 1970s gave diet and nutrition research increasing significance as a means of improving therapy, and so brought advocates of therapy into competition with prevention over scarce resources. As we have seen, therapists were able to persuade the DNCAC that therapeutically related research proposals had stronger scientific merit, were more likely to produce results and quickly, and were more likely to appease the programme’s supporters in Congress. Even Gori – an advocate of prevention – came to acknowledge the political calculation that prevention research was unlikely to provide the sorts of results that would satisfy Congress, especially as it also risked aggravating allies of the food industry on Capitol Hill. The mere threat that the industry’s powerful supporters could cause problems for a field already struggling to satisfy Congress was enough to make prevention research seem a risky political venture.

The DNCP can, therefore, be seen, in part, as a microcosm of broader tensions within the NCI between therapeutics and prevention over funding priorities. But, if its early history is a story of the tensions between the two, its later history is a story of an emergent (albeit temporary and uneasy) alliance between prevention and therapeutics, as from the mid-1970s the DNCP came into competition for funds with larger NCI programmes, notably the Special Virus Cancer Programme and the Comprehensive Cancer Centres. In some ways, this competition exacerbated tensions between therapy and prevention on the DNCAC, for it was advocates of prevention who figured most prominently in the political and media campaigns to save the DNCP, and much of their criticism was directed at the therapeutic orientation of the NCI. Yet, I suggest, it also brought the two sides of the DNCAC together to fight the common threat to their programme. Advocates of prevention saw political benefits in allying themselves with therapists (given the latter’s political clout within the NCI and on Capitol Hill), while therapists also saw political benefits in allying themselves with advocates of prevention (given the strong sympathy for prevention within Congress and in certain sections of the media).

As the debate on diet and nutrition intensified in 1977, strains between prevention and therapeutics grew. The temptation to jump ship, however, was briefly held in check as all sides of the DNCAC waited to see how events would play themselves out. The move to go over the heads of the NCI and appeal to President Carter resulted in no (public) criticism from any member of the DNCAC, advocate of therapy or prevention. Privately, some may have disagreed with this move, but Newell’s response – the cutting of Gori’s committees – seems to have temporarily sealed an uneasy union, since it ended any opportunity for anyone to use the DNCAC to promote their agendas, and opened the possibility of all having to compete against other investigator-initiated proposals rather than determine policy behind committee doors.Footnote 109 The union ended with Gori’s removal, and probably more importantly Upton’s reorganisation of NCI and the DNCP in 1978, which meant that the actual direction of research shifted to the division responsible for administering that part of the programme (Figure 3). The reorganisation was presented as a means of broadening the scope of the programme, and of integrating all diet and nutrition elements of the national cancer programme. It also gave sectional interests a greater level of autonomy, however, and reduced administrators’ ability to shape the programme, especially with the shift from contracts to investigator-initiated grants. The sorts of political alliance that had held under Gori’s tenure began to break up and new ones to form.

The story of the DNCP is thus a tale of shifting alliances and co-evolving relations between cancer therapy and prevention. Its emergence began with parental concerns about their sick children expressed though the Candlelighters, one of a new breed of single-issue health advocacy groups that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s pressuring Congress to redirect NCI spending to areas of their interest.Footnote 110 It was also facilitated by a growing political interest in environmentalist critiques of medicine in the 1960s and 1970s, and Congressional concern about the neglect of nutrition in the medical schools, the role of diet and nutrition in the onset of chronic disease, and the NCI’s focus on therapeutics and basic (virus) research. But Congress was often a divided house, subject to conflicting lobbies from commercial, biomedical, patients’ and other advocacy groups, and these divisions were exploited within the NCI to direct funding one way or another – as when supporters of therapeutics persuaded the DNCP that it would be politically worthwhile directing more resources to therapeutics at the expense of aetiology, or when the political calculations changed in 1977 and therapists came to support advocates of prevention to save the DNCP from outside predations. The history of the DNCP was thus the product of struggles and negotiations between numerous often conflicting groups and individuals, distributed across many institutions (governmental and voluntary), all seeking to promote their own interests and agendas.

Such struggles were exacerbated by Gori who emerged as a polarising figure in the fights over the DNCP. The NCI was an organisation sensitive to public criticism, in which budgetary decisions were often fought out behind closed doors, with public displays of consensus masking internal conflict. This is not to say that it was not possible to make discontent public, but it was often done discreetly, perhaps through third parties and anonymous leaks, and always in ways that did not embarrass those higher up the organisational hierarchy upon whom subordinates depended for support. By the mid-1970s, Gori had abandoned such discretion, and so opened himself to attacks from powerful groups and individuals within the NCI, public expressions of discontent being especially dangerous to smaller, weaker groups within the organisation, and those who worked within them. It could be argued that the DNCP would have suffered cuts in the mid-1970s no matter who was chief. Gori’s strategy, personality and simultaneous involvement in controversies over tobacco, however, ensured a more spectacular conclusion to his directorship than others might have achieved. As one report put it euphemistically he was ‘one of NCI’s less inhibited infighters at budget distribution time’.Footnote 111

Gori’s problems thus provide an insight into the patronage system within the NCI.Footnote 112 The agency in the 1970s often presented itself as a meritocracy in which the route to success on the Bethesda campus of the NIH was research or administrative excellence. But, if the NCI was a meritocracy, it was also a hierarchical organisation that revolved around networks of patronage. The Institute was a warren of fiefdoms headed by the NCI director (from 1971, a Presidential appointee), who presided over subordinate directors, who in turn presided over more minor officials. Each director and subordinate supported individuals and groups within his or her section of the organisation, which might also be subdivided into further sub-sections, headed by subordinate subordinates, all of whom offered patronage to those under them and (at least public) support and loyalty to those above. Thus a key to advancing a career within the NCI could involve finding powerful patrons and keeping them on board as supporters. These patrons might act as mentors and advisors, and could shield less powerful individuals from political harm. Equally, a patron could leave a subordinate vulnerable if the latter did not live up to expectations, the politics got too hot, the patron was negligent of support or moved on elsewhere. In all such circumstances a previously sheltered subordinate could suddenly feel chill winds.

Gori fell afoul of such shifts. Starting under the wing of his director/patron James Peters, he found himself isolated and vulnerable after Peters’ left, with rumours that his new boss wanted someone else in his place. As economic circumstances changed in the mid-1970s, Gori found himself constantly struggling against the NCI hierarchy for more funds, and loosing support, especially after he tried to circumvent his seniors within the NCI by appealing to their political masters. This, and the political miscalculation of his involvement in the smoking debate, left him vulnerable and without support from powerful individuals within the organisation, and he lost control of the DNCP, and eventually had to leave the NCI. This did not end the programme, but it allowed it to be split along pre-existing lines of tension, which ensured that therapeutic and preventive research on diet, nutrition and cancer were carried out relatively autonomously under separate parts of the NCI, albeit still under the umbrella of the DNCP.

Subsequent NCI leaders would distance themselves from Gori, and some erased him from historical accounts of the programme.Footnote 113 But, it is also arguable that his willingness to go public maintained pressure on the NCI to improve what in 1978 one staff member on McGovern’s Senate Committee on Nutrition and Human needs called ‘the abysmal nutrition research effort by the NCI’.Footnote 114 Gori might have gone, but he had set the stage for NCI interest in diet and nutrition research in the 1970s and especially the 1980s, as it sought to address an emergent scientific consensus that diet and nutrition were the major preventable causes of cancer after smoking.Footnote 115

References

1. Lester Breslow et al., A History of Cancer Control in the United States, with Emphasis on the Period 1946–1971, Prepared by the History of Cancer Control Project, UCLA School of Public Health, pursuant to Contract no. N01-CN-55172 (Division of Cancer Control and Rehabilitation, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD: Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Control and Rehabilitation, 1977). On early detection and treatment, see Robert A. Aronowitz, ‘Do Not Delay: Breast Cancer and Time, 1900–1970’, Milbank Quarterly, 79 (2001), 355–86; Robert A. Aronowitz, Unnatural History: Breast Cancer and American Society (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007); Barron H. Lerner, The Breast Cancer Wars. Hope, Fear, and the Pursuit of a Cure in Twentieth-Century America (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001); James T. Patterson, The Dread Disease. Cancer and Modern American Culture (Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 1987); David Cantor, ‘Cancer Control and Prevention in the Twentieth Century’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 81 (2007), 1–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2. For problems in defining prevention in the 1970s, see Cantor, ibid., especially 24–30.Google Scholar

3. Proctor, Robert N. , Cancer Wars. How Politics Shapes What We Know and What We Don’t Know About Cancer (New York: Basic Books, 1995).Google Scholar

4. Richard Rettig, Cancer Crusade. The Story of the National Cancer Act of 1971 (Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press, 1977); Stephen Strickland, Politics, Science, and Dread Disease: A Short History of United States Medical Research Policy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1972); Kenneth E. Studer and Daryl E. Chubin, The Cancer Mission. Social Contexts of Biomedical Research (Beverley Hills, CA and London: Sage, 1980). A partial exception is James T. Patterson (op. cit. (note 1), 260–1) who makes passing reference to the problematic status of attempts to link diet and cancer in the 1970s..Google Scholar

5. For some limited exceptions to the neglect of the 1970s in the general literature on diet and nutrition see Harvey Levenstein, Paradox of Plenty. A Social History of Eating in Modern America (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993). See also James C. Whorton, Inner Hygiene. Constipation and the Pursuit of Health in Modern Society (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), especially chs 9 and 10.Google Scholar

6. Dudrick, Stanley J. , ‘Early Developments and Clinical Applications of Total Parenteral Nutrition’, Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 27 (2003), 291299; Erik Vinnars and Douglas Wilmore, ‘History of Parenteral Nutrition’, Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 27 (2003), 225–31; David F. Driscoll, ‘Compounding TPN Admixtures: Then and Now’, Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 27 (2003), 433–8; Peggi Guenter, Susan Curtas, Lynne Murphy and Marsha Orr, ‘The Impact of Nursing Practice on the History and Effectiveness of Total Parenteral Nutrition’, Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 28 (2004), 54–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

7. Marcus, Alan I. , Cancer from Beef: DES, Federal Food Regulation, and Consumer Confidence (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994; Jean-Paul Gaudillière, ‘Food, drug and consumer regulation: the “meat, DES, and cancer” debates in the United States’, in David Cantor, Christian Bonah and Matthias Dörries (eds), Meat, Medicine and Human Health in the Twentieth Century (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2010), 179–202; Devra Davis, The Secret History of the War on Cancer (New York: Basic Books, 2007); Allan M. Brandt, The Cigarette Century: The Rise, Fall, and Deadly Persistence of the Product that Defined America (New York: Basic Books, 2007); Christopher C. Sellers, Hazards of the Job: From Industrial Disease to Environmental Health Science (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1997); Christopher C. Sellers, ‘Discovering Environmental Cancer: Wilhelm Hueper, Post–World War II Epidemiology, and the Vanishing Clinician’s Eye’, American Journal of Public Health, 87 (1997), 1824–35.Google Scholar

8. Proctor, op. cit. (note 3); Stephen Hilgartner, Science on Stage. Expert Advice as Public Drama (Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 2000); Mark E. Rushefsky, Making Cancer Policy (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1986), 176–9.Google Scholar

9. Proctor, ibid.; Davis, op. cit. (note 7); Richard Kluger, Ashes to Ashes: America’s Hundred-Year Cigarette War, and the Unabashed Triumph of Philip Morris (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1996).Google Scholar

10. On the history of leukaemia, see Gretchen Krueger, Hope and Suffering: Children, Cancer, and the Paradox of Experimental Medicine (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008); see also John Laszlo, The Cure of Childhood Leukemia. Into the Age of Miracles (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1995).Google Scholar

11. Gretchen Marie Krueger, ‘A Cure is Near: Children, Families, and Cancer in America, 1945–1980’ (unpublished PhD thesis: Yale University, 2003), 223–8. For current information on the Candlelighters now the American Childhood Cancer Organisation see http://www.candlelighters.org/, accessed 27 May 2003 and http://www.acco.org/, accessed 2 May 2012.Google Scholar

12. On Grace Monaco’s leadership, see Louis J. Medvene, Scott Wituk and Douglas A. Luke, ‘Characteristics of Self-Help Group Leaders: The Significance of Professional and Founder Statuses’, International Journal of Self Help and Self Care, 1 (1999–2000), 91–105.Google Scholar

13. Leiken was not alone in encouraging parents to get more involved in their children’s care. Elsewhere physicians sought to get parents to talk about their experiences of their children’s illnesses in group therapy sessions, and to involve parents in the ‘team’ care of children with cancer. Such strategies also helped stimulate the creation of single-issue advocacy groups such as the Candlelighters. Warren A. Heffron, ‘Group therapy sessions as part of treatment of children with cancer’, in Carl Pochedly (ed.), Clinical Management of Cancer in Children (Acton, MA: Publishing Sciences Group, 1975), 247–57; Larraine M. Bivalec and Joanne Berkman, ‘Care By Parent. A New Trend’, Nursing Clinics of North America, 11, 1 (March 1976), 109–13.Google Scholar

14. Keene, Nancy , ‘Meet Activist Grace Ann Monaco’, http://www.onconurse.com/news/activist_monaco.html, Onconurse.com, Patient-Centered Guides (© 2001), accessed 27 May 2003.Google Scholar

15. ‘ACS, AACI, Candlelighters Present Cancer Program Support at Hearings’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 12 (24 March 1978), 4–8, especially 6-7.Google Scholar

16. See, for example, Power’s testimony in hearings over the 1971 Cancer Act, National Cancer Attack Act of 1971, Part 2, Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Public Health and Environment, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, US House of Representatives, 92nd Congress, 1st Session, Serial No. 92-41, (15–16, 20–21, 27–30 September and 4, 7, 11 October 1971), 568–79.Google Scholar

17. Keene, op. cit. (note 14).Google Scholar

18. Grace Powers Monaco, ‘Introduction’, in Candlelighters Foundation and National Cancer Institute, Proceedings of the First National Conference for Parents of Children with Cancer: ‘Maintaining a Normal life’, June 23–25, 1978, Marymount College, Arlington, Virginia, NIH publication No. 80-2176 (Bethesda, MD: US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, 1980), 9–10.Google Scholar

19. See Candlelighters National Newsletter, 2, 2 (Summer 1978), 1. Copy in the NCI’s LION database (hereafter, NCI archives): item number PB-7800-012721.Google Scholar

20. See, for example, ‘Candlelighters Fight Cancer on Behalf of Children’, Congressional Record, 20, 15 (17–21 June 1974), 19739–44: 19742.Google Scholar

21. ‘Congress Orders Programs in Nutrition Research; Cancer Act Extension Beefs up NCI Chief’s Authority’, The Cancer Newsletter, 1, 23 (12 July 1974), 1–2.Google Scholar

22. Gori, Gio B. , ‘The Diet, Nutrition, and Cancer Program of the NCI National Cancer Program’, Cancer Research, 35 (1975), 35453547; see also James A. Peters, ‘National Cancer Institute Program on Nutrition and Cancer’, Cancer Research, 35 (1975) 3544.Google ScholarPubMed

23. For a history of this programme from 1974–78, see ch. 3, ‘Past activities of the DNCP’, in Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program. Status Report. September 1978 (Bethesda, MD: Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, September 1978), 17–23, NCI archives: item number AR-0000-006176; see also Gio B. Gori, ‘The Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program of the National Cancer Institute – National Cancer Program’, Text of a Presentation to the National Cancer Advisory Board, 16 July 1975, NCI archives: item number AR-7507-010688.Google Scholar

24. Diet, Nutrition, and Cancer Program, Workshop on Diet and Nutrition in the Therapy and Rehabilitation of the Cancer Patient, March 1975 (Bethesda, MD: Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, 1975).Google Scholar

25. Symposium Sponsored by the American Cancer Society and National Cancer Institute, ‘Nutrition in the Causation of Cancer’, Cancer Research, 35, 11, Part 2 (November 1975), 3231–550.Google Scholar

26. ‘ACS, AACI, Candlelighters’, op. cit. (note 15), especially 7. ‘Statement of the Candlelighters on the Biomedical Research Training Amendments of 1978 (H.R. 10908) Before the Subcommittee on Health and Environment of the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce of the United States House of Representatives’, NCI archives: item number DC003413.Google Scholar

27. Diet, Nutrition, and Cancer Program, National Cancer Institute, Diet and Nutrition: A Resource for Parents of Children with Cancer, NIH publication, 80-2038 (Bethesda, MD: US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health, 1979). Earlier publications include The Candlelighters Oncology Handbook for Parents (The Candlelighters, South Florida Chapter, April 1976).Google Scholar

28. ‘Dr. Gio Gori Heads New NCI Program on Diet, Nutrition and Cancer’, The NIH Record, 27, 19 (23 September 1975), 1 and 7.Google Scholar

29. Kluger, op. cit. (note 9), 428.Google Scholar

30. Davis, op. cit. (note 7), 179.Google Scholar

31. More generally on Gori see Oral History with Giovanni Battista Gori, 25 April 1996 (interviewer Carl Baker), NIH History Office Oral Histories (hereafter, Gori Oral History 1996); and an interview I conducted with Gio Gori about his involvement in the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme at his office, 6 November 2003. (Hereafter, Gori interview, 6 November 2003.) Gori’s career at NCI is difficult to trace. His resume in the tobacco legacy archives gives the following dates: Deputy Director of the Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention (1972–80), Acting Associate Director Carcinogenesis Programme (1976–78); Director, Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme (1973–80); Associate Scientific Director for Programme, DCCP (1968–72); Director, Smoking and Health Programme (1968–80). (The Legacy Tobacco Documents Library, Bates Number 2057835960/5981, http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/djo52e00, accessed 4 May 2012.) However, these dates are inaccurate. The most accurate dates would probably be in his NIH personnel file (or OPF file), but it was not possible to obtain a copy of this – my thanks to Karen Hubbard and Joy Osborne for trying. The following dates are used in this paper and the evidence for the start and end dates is as follows: (1) Associate Scientific Director for Programme, Etiology Area, Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention (DCCP) (1968–c.1973): Memorandum from Carl G. Baker, Scientific Director for Etiology, NCI to Senior Etiology Staff, ‘Appointment of Dr. Gio Gori’, 28 October 1968, NCI archives: item number AR-6810-000494. ‘Dr. Gori Appointed NCI Sci. Director For Program Etiology’, The NIH Record, 20, 25 (10 December 1968), 5. (2) (Acting) Deputy Director of DCCP (1973–1980): Memorandum from Frank J. Rauscher Jr., Director, National Cancer Programme, National Cancer Institute, ‘Appointment of Deputy Director, Division of Cancer Cause & Prevention’, 15 October 1974, NCI archives: item number AR-7410-011104. See also Frank J. Rauscher Jr., ‘Special Communication. From the Director, National Cancer Program’, 27 March 1975, NCI archives: item number AR008109. ‘Dr. Gio Gori Becomes Dep. Director of Cancer Cause, Prevention Div.’, The NIH Record, 27, 1 (14 January 1975), 7. ‘Gio Gori Accepts Franklin Institute Job, says “NCI Has Been Good to Me”’, The Cancer Letter, 6, 16 (18 April 1980), 3–5. (3) Acting (Associate) Director Carcinogenesis Programme (1976–77): Memorandum from James A. Peters, Director, DCCP to Senior Staff, Carcinogenesis Research Program, DCCP, ‘Acting Director, Carcinogenesis Research Program, DCCP’, 9 December 1976, NCI archives: item number AR-7612-011128. ‘More Changes in Carcinogenesis Program at NCI: Gori, Workshops Out, Branch Chiefs Running It’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 46 (18 November 1977), 1–3. (4) Director, Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme (1975–c.1978): ‘Dr. Gio Gori Heads New NCI Program’, op. cit. (note 28). Arthur C. Upton, ‘NCI Special Communication’, 8 December 1978, NCI archives: item number AR008211. (The appointment of Guy Newell as the new DNCP coordinator.) See also Guy Newell, ‘Presentation to the National Cancer Advisory Board’, 18 September 1978, NCI archives: item number PB003861. (5) Director, Smoking and Health Programme (1973–c.1978): Gio B. Gori to Dr. Murray Senkus (R. J. Reynolds), 29 October 1973, Bates No. 501990121, http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/pln29d00, accessed 7 May 2012.Google Scholar

32. Comments of Gio Gori in ‘Research Opportunities in Diet, Nutrition Program Outlined’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 28 (11 July 1975), 3–5: 5.Google Scholar

33. ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero in on Mass of Data, Plan Contract and Grant Project Areas’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 35 (29 August 1975), 1–6.Google Scholar

34. Shils, Maurice E. , ‘Nutritional Problems Arising from the Treatment of Cancer’, CA. A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 20 (1970), 188196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

35. Cuddy, Rosemary E. , ‘The Role of Diet in Cancer Therapy’, March 1975, NCI archives: item number DC-7503-006079.Google Scholar

36. The discussion in this and the following paragraphs is based on ‘Research Opportunities’, op. cit. (note 32). ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33). ‘Reports on Nutrition and Cancer Show Need for More Clinical Studies’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 36 (5 September 1975), 3–5; see also Myron Winick (ed.), Nutrition and Cancer (New York: John Wiley, 1977), chs 6–12; Philip S. Schein, John S. MacDonald, Catherine Waters and David Haidak, ‘Nutritional Complications of Cancer and its Treatment’, Seminars in Oncology, 2 (1975), 337–47; Gail Cresci and John Mellinger, ‘The History of Nonsurgical Enteral Tube Feeding Access’, Nutrition in Clinical Practice, 21 (2006), 522–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

37. See for example, ‘Statement by Gio B. Gori, PhD, Deputy Director, Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention Before the Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, United States Senate’, 28 July 1976, NCI archives: item number AR-7607-008786. Radiotherapy of the oropharyngeal region could destroy a sense of taste.Google Scholar

38. This technique involved using a catheter inserted into the superior vena to provide long-term nutritional support. For Dudrick’s recollections of the development of such techniques in the 1960s; see Dudrick, op. cit. (note 6); see also Vinnars and Wilmore, op. cit. (note 6); Driscoll, op. cit. (note 6); Guenter, Curtas, Murphy and Orr, op. cit. (note 6).Google Scholar

39. George M. Martin, ‘Nutrition and Cancer’, Lancet, 294, 7628 (8 November 1969), 1014; see, for example, ‘Statement by Gio B. Gori’, op. cit. (note 37), 15–6. Cuddy, op. cit. (note 35).Google Scholar

40. Cuddy, op. cit. (note 35).Google Scholar

41. See, for example, Gio Gori’s comments in ‘The War on Cancer—Are We Winning It?’, first published in Newsday (10 January 1977), and reprinted in United States Congress Senate Committee on agriculture, nutrition and forestry. Subcommittee on nutrition. Nutrition and Cancer Research: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Nutrition of the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, United States Senate, Ninety-fifth Congress, Second Session, on Overview of Nutrition Research at the National Institutes of Health with Particular Emphasis on the National Cancer Institute, June 12 and 13, 1978 (Washington, DC: US Government. Printing Office, 1978), 100–37: 118.Google Scholar

42. Robert A. Becker, ‘New Research Shows That…Nutrition Fights Cancer’, National Observer (28 June 1977). NCI archives: item number CL004483. On the status of nutrition sciences in the medical schools see Committee on Nutrition in Medical Education, Food and Nutrition Board, Commission on Life Sciences, National Research Council, Nutrition Education in US Medical Schools (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1985), especially chapter 2.Google Scholar

43. ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33), 3, ‘therapy’ was spelled ‘therpy’ in original article.Google Scholar

44. Weinberg, Robert , ‘Ernst Ludwig Wynder 1922–99’, Nature, 401 (1999), 442.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

45. For Wynder’s opinion in the 1950s of the role of diet in cancers of the oral cavity, oesophagus, stomach, liver and thyroid, see Ernst L. Wynder, ‘Medical Progress. Some Practical Aspects of Cancer Prevention’, New England Journal of Medicine, 246 (1952), 492–503, 538–46 and 573–82. On Wynder’s relations with the Philip Morris tobacco company, which tried to manipulate his work on smoking; see N. Fields and S. Chapman, ‘Chasing Ernst L Wynder: 40 Years of Philip Morris’ Efforts to Influence a Leading Scientist’, Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 57 (2003), 571–8.Google Scholar

46. The NCI provided US$2.1 million to help in the construction of the Valhalla centre. Gori was the project officer on this contract. Mary-Jane Schneider, NCI press release, 10 January 1973, NCI archives: item number NR001557.Google Scholar

47. ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33), 3.Google Scholar

48. Ibid. For examples of such studies see William Haenszel and Minoru Kurihara, ‘Studies of Japanese Migrants I. Mortality from Cancer and Other Diseases among Japanese in the United States’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 40 (1968), 43–68; William Haenszel, Minoru Kurihara, Mitsuo Segi and Richard K.C. Lee, ‘Stomach Cancer among Japanese in Hawaii’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 49 (1972), 969–88; Toshio Oiso, ‘Incidence of Stomach Cancer and its Relation to Dietary Habits and Nutrition in Japan between 1900 and 1975’, Cancer Research, 35 (1975), 3254–8.Google Scholar

49. Staszewski, Jerzy and Haenszel, William , ‘Cancer Mortality Among the Polish-Born in the US’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 35 (1965), 291297; Pelayo Correa, Carlos Cuello and Edgar Dugue, ‘Carcinoma and Intestinal Metaplasia of the Stomach in Colombian Migrants’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 44 (1970), 297–306.Google Scholar

50. Studies included Frank R. Lemon and Richard T. Walden, ‘Death from Respiratory System Disease among Seventh-Day Adventist Men’, JAMA, 198, 2 (1966), 117–26; Frank R. Lemon, Richard T. Walden and Robert W. Woods, ‘Cancer of the Lung and Mouth in Seventh-Day Adventists. Preliminary Report on a Population Study’, Cancer, 17 (1964), 486–97; Roland L. Phillips, ‘Cancer and Adventists’, Science, 183 (1974), 471; Roland L. Phillips, ‘Role of Life-Style and Dietary Habits in Risk of Cancer among Seventh-Day Adventists’, Cancer Research, 35 (1975), 3513–22; James E. Enstrom, ‘Cancer Mortality among Mormons’, Cancer, 36 (1975), 825–41; J.L. Lyon, M.R. Klauber, J.W. Gardner and C.R. Smart, ‘Cancer Incidence in Mormons and Non-Mormons in Utah, 1966–1970’, New England Journal of Medicine, 294 (1976), 129–33; John Higginson and Calum S. Muir, ‘Epidemiology’, in James F. Holland and Emil Frei (eds), Cancer Medicine (Philadelphia, PA: Lea and Febiger, 1973), 241–306; Peter Greenwald, Robert F. Korns, Philip C. Nasca and Patricia E. Wolfgang, ‘Cancer in United States Jews’, Cancer Research, 35 (1975), 3507–12.Google Scholar

51. For a survey of this literature, see Frederick L. Hoffman, Cancer and Diet, with Facts and Observations on Related Subjects (Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1937).Google Scholar

52. Aronowitz, ‘Do Not Delay’, op. cit. (note 1); Aronowitz, Unnatural History, op. cit. (note 1); Lerner, op. cit. (note 1); Breslow, op. cit. (note 1); Cantor, op. cit. (note 1); see also Patterson, op. cit. (note 1).Google Scholar

53. See, for example, Albert Soiland, A Professional Responsibility and a Public Liability (New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1928), 80; David Cantor, ‘Confused messages: meat, civilization, and cancer education in the early twentieth century’, in Cantor, Bonah and Dörries (eds), op. cit. (note 7), 111–26.Google Scholar

54. Breslow, op. cit. (note 1); Patterson, op. cit. (note 1).Google Scholar

55. Albert Tannenbaum, ‘The Initiation and Growth of Tumors. Introduction. I. Effects of Underfeeding’, American Journal of Cancer, 38 (1940), 335–50; Albert Tannenbaum, ‘The Genesis and Growth of Tumors. II. Effects of Caloric Restriction per se’, Cancer Research, 2 (1942), 460–67; Albert Tannenbaum, ‘The Genesis and Growth of Tumors. III. Effects of a High-Fat Diet’, Cancer Research, 2 (1942), 468–75; Albert Tannenbaum, ‘The Dependence of the Genesis of Induced Skin Tumors on the Caloric Intake During Different Stages of Carcinogenesis’, Cancer Research, 4 (1944), 673–77; Albert Tannenbaum, ‘The Dependence of Tumor Formation on the Degree of Caloric Restriction’, Cancer Research, 5 (1945), 609–15; Albert Tannenbaum, ‘The Dependence of Tumor Formation on the Composition of the Calorie-Restricted Diet as Well as on the Degree of Restriction’, Cancer Research, 5 (1945), 616–25.Google Scholar

56. Michael B. Shimkin, As Memory Serves: Six Essays on a Personal Involvement with the National Cancer Institute, 1938 to 1978, (Bethesda: US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health, NIH Publication No. 83-2217, September 1983), 26. More generally on NIH hostility to nutrition, and in particular how James Shannon’s favouring of pure research harmed nutrition research, see Raymond Kaiser’s comments in Breslow, op. cit. (note 1), Volume 4, appendices, 49.Google Scholar

57. Allan M. Brandt, ‘The Cigarette, Risk, and American Culture’, Daedalus, 119 (Fall, 1990), 155–76; Brandt, op. cit. (note 7); William G. Rothstein, Public Health and the Risk Factor: A History of an Uneven Medical Revolution (Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2003).Google Scholar

58. Proctor, op. cit. (note 3), ch. 3.Google Scholar

59. For concerns about cyclamates, DES and saccharin, see Chis Lecos, ‘The Sweet and Sour History of Saccharin, Cyclamate, and Aspartame’, FDA Consumer (September 1981), 8–11. For a brief account of this controversy that sets in the context of food politics of the 1960s and 1970s, see Levenstein, op. cit. (note 5), 172; Marcus, op. cit. (note 7). ‘Saccharin Ban Gets Attention of Rogers’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 11 (18 March 1977), 5; ‘Saccharin Flap Splits Scientists; ACS Proposed Delaney Modification’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 15 (15 April 1977), 5–6; ‘FDA on Saccharin’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 16 (22 April 1977), 1. For the development of organic or natural foods at this time see Levenstein, ibid., 162 and 202.Google Scholar

60. ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33), 3.Google Scholar

61. ‘Research Opportunities’, op. cit. (note 32), 3, ‘irrelevant’ was spelled ‘irrelevent’ in the original article.Google Scholar

62. Stanley Dudrick in ‘Rhoads Presses for Greater Emphasis on Etiology in DNCP; Workshops Develop New Research Leads’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 29 (16 July 1976), 1–5: 2.Google Scholar

63. Dudrick noted: ‘It might be best to show some rapid progress in therapy, with a greater margin of effectiveness’, ibid., 2.Google Scholar

64. ‘premature “Ahas!”’ as the biochemist William Darby (President of the Nutrition Foundation) noted ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33), 3. For biographical information on Darby, see Harold H. Sandstead and Conrad Wagner, ‘William J. Darby, 1913–2001’, Journal of Nutrition, 132 (2002), 1103–6.Google Scholar

65. As the surgeon Stanley Dudrick noted, these latter cancers might not appear for 10–20 years, and it was too late he claimed to prevent their occurrence. ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33), 4.Google Scholar

66. ‘Rhoads Presses’, op. cit. (note 62). Stanley Dudrick made a similar point in ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero’, op. cit. (note 33).Google Scholar

67. ‘Rhoads Presses’, op. cit. (note 62), 1. Note the slightly different values in Table 5 – 55.5% for therapy, 35.1% for aetiology and 9.4% for programme management and support.Google Scholar

68. Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, Status Report and Working Papers for the Advisory Committee Meeting December 14–15, 1976, National Institutes of Health, Building 31, Wing C, Conference Room 10, Bethesda Maryland 20014 (Bethesda: National Cancer Program, 1976), 12.Google Scholar

69. In 1977 the percentage proposed going on aetiology projects rose to 46% of the proposed budget, with therapy falling to 49% of the budget. A smaller proportion of the budget also went to general support. Diet Nutrition and Cancer Program, Status Report, 30 September 1977, Diet Nutrition and Cancer Program, NIH, 1977, p. 59, NCI archives: item number AR-0000-006176.Google Scholar

70. Rettig, op. cit. (note 4). On the early flush of money Gori recalled that ‘at the beginning we had enough money to fund some “pet” or “interesting” in-house projects – the Virus Program, the Carcinogenesis Program, Smoking and Health Program, and the Nutrition Program, which also I started, you’ll remember, under pressure from the Candlelighters at that time in ’74 or ’73 – and so we had the money’, Gori Oral History 1996, op. cit. (note 31), 21.Google Scholar

71. Gori quoted in ‘The War on Cancer—Are We Winning It?’, op. cit. (note 41), 118. For an account of virus research at the NCI see Doogab Yi’s book manuscript, currently in progress, on the NCI’s Special Virus Cancer Programme (SVCP). Under the 1971 Act Comprehensive Cancer Centres were intended to conduct long-term multi-disciplinary programmes in cancer biomedical research; cancer clinical services and investigations; cancer training and education; and community programmes of cancer diagnosis, epidemiology and preventive medicine. On comprehensive cancer centres, see Rettig, op. cit. (note 4), 37, 107, 245–6, 253, 302–3, 322; United States General Accounting Office, Comprehensive Cancer Centers: Their Locations and Role In Demonstration, MWD-76-98 (Washington, DC: General Accounting Office, 17 March 1976). The NCI’s Office of Cancer Centers offers a brief history of NCI involvement in cancer centers at http://cancercenters.cancer.gov/about/our-history.html, accessed 4 May 2012.Google Scholar

72. ‘Gio Gori Accepts Franklin’, op. cit. (note 31). The diet programme was not the only one cut: Gori’s tobacco programme was also cut at the same time. Gori recalled: ‘By the end of the ’70s, the training and the new construction had created such an outside need for money that people began looking with a jaundiced eye to everything that was done in-house, and so in-house programs inevitably suffered.’ Gori Oral History 1996, op. cit. (note 31), 21.Google Scholar

73. Diet Nutrition and Cancer Program, op. cit. (note 69), 59. For the budget justification for 1977 see ‘National Cancer Program. Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program. Fiscal Year 1977 Budget Justification’, George S. McGovern Papers, Mudd Library, Princeton University, Box 628.Google Scholar

74. Gori reported in April 1976 that he had received more than 150 letters of intent, and at least 500 phone calls about Diet-Nutrition CREGS ‘In Brief’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 18 (30 April 1976), 1. On the budget problems, see ‘NCI to Fund only 30–35 % of Approved Grants Even With $815 Million; Construction Slashed’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 34 (20 August 1976), 1–2. ‘Hard Times for Cancer Control’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 40 (1 October 1976), 1–3.Google Scholar

75. ‘Diet/Nutrition Group Sends Out Hotly Worded Resolution, Gets Hot Response’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 5 (4 February 1977), 4–7.Google Scholar

76. ‘The War on Cancer’, op. cit. (note 41).Google Scholar

77. ‘The War on Cancer’, op. cit. (note 41).Google Scholar

78. ‘The War on Cancer’, op. cit. (note 41), 118.Google Scholar

79. ‘Gio Gori Accepts Franklin’, op. cit. (note 31), 4.Google Scholar

80. ‘Newell tells Advisory Committee it isn’t a Lobbying Group, “Accept What We Give You”’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 14 (8 April 1977), 1. In addition, in an interview Gori also highlighted changes in the social and sexual politics of NCI after Rauscher left that made him feel isolated during Newell’s interregnum. Gori interview, 6 November 2003, op. cit. (note 31). Gori recalls that Schmidt was opposed to the idea that diet had anything to do with cancer, Gori Oral History 1996, op. cit. (note 31), 23. For Schmidt’s comments on the National Cancer Programme and his response to criticism of cancer centres, see Benno C. Schmidt, ‘Five Years Into the National Cancer Program: Retrospective Perspectives-the National Cancer Act of 1971’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 59, 2 (supplement) (August 1977), 687–92. For Newell’s C.V. see NCI archives: item numbers AR008807 and AR004417.Google Scholar

81. ‘NCI Advisory Groups to be Reduced by One-Third, with $800,000 Cutback’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 16 (22 April 1977), 3–4. ‘Diet & Nutrition, Carcinogenesis, Virus, Tobacco Committees Proposed for Elimination’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 18 (6 May 1977), 1–3. ‘Questions Raised By Committee Kills, Mergers Are Still Not Resolved’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 30 (29 July 1977), 5–6.Google Scholar

82. ‘Gori Gets into Another Controversy at a Time When He Did Not Need One’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 33 (18 August 1978), 5–7: 7.Google Scholar

83. Comments of Peggy Fry in Nutrition and Cancer Research, op. cit. (note 41), 30–6, especially 33 and 35–6.Google Scholar

84. Quotation in Ad Hoc Committee for the Review of the Special Virus Cancer Program (Zinder Committee), 5 March 1973, p. 29, NCI archives: item number AR-7300-001108. The Special Virus Cancer Programme was one the largest contract programmes in the NCI, and the subject of special criticism from biomedical scientists, see Nicholas Wade, ‘Special Virus Cancer Program: Travails of a Biological Moon shot’, Science, 174 (1971), 1306–11. More generally see Doogab Yi’s book manuscript, op. cit. (note 71). For criticism focused on another of Gori’s programmes, see R. Jeffrey Smith, ‘NCI Bioassays Yield a Trail of Blunders’, Science, 204 (22 June 1979), 1287–92. For more general critiques of contract mechanisms see ‘Review of National Cancer Institute Contracting Operations Performed by the Office of the Inspector General’, 1 May 1978, NCI archives: item number AR010082 and A. Lynn Bryant, Fred J. Svec, Delmar W. Brim, Paul W. Wagner, Robert M. Namovicz, Paul H. Schaffer and Kim Horgan, A Management Review of the National Cancer Institute’s Research Contracts Branch Operations (US Army Management Engineering Training Agency and the Management Policy Branch, National Cancer Institute, February 1978), NCI archives: item number AR-7802-010713. See also United States Congress Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, National Cancer Institute Contracting and Procurement Procedures, 1981: Hearing before the Committee on Labor and Human Resources, United States Senate, Ninety-seventh Congress, First Session, on Examination of the National Cancer Institute Contracting and Grant procedures, June 2, 1981 (Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1981). For an internal history of contracting within the NCI see Vincent T. DeVita Jr., David M. Keefer, Louis M. Carrese, Bayard H. Morrison III and J. Paul Van Nevel, The National Cancer Institute Contracting Process, NIH Publication No. 82-2425 (US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health, Reprinted September 1982).Google Scholar

85. National Cancer Institute, Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention, Annual Program Review Document Fiscal Year 1974, Prepared for the National Cancer Advisory Board Meeting of 7–9 October 1974, p. 4, NCI archives: item number AR-7410-010825.Google Scholar

86. ‘Gori Goes to Hopkins Part-time, Will Retain Job as DCCP Deputy’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 35 (1 September 1978), 4. For problems over the mechanism of funding – contract, grants or cancer research emphasis grants (CREGS) (the latter being grants intended to shift money from contract support to investigator initiated research) – see ‘Diet, Nutrition Committee to Select Projects for $6 million in Contracts’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 2 (9 January 1976), 6; ‘Nutrition RFPs to be so Flexible They’ll Really be Grants, Gori Says’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 4 (23 January 1976), 5–6; ‘Diet, Nutrition Program to Fund Projects with Program Grants’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 8 (20 February 1976), 8; ‘Diet Grant Guidelines Available; NIH Says They’re CREGs, Gori Says Not’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 15 (9 April 1976), 4–6; ‘De-emphasis of Traditional Grants Still Haunts some; Recent NCI Actions Held Up as Evidence’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 21 (21 May 1976), 1–2: 2; ‘Lawsuit Could Delay Diet-Nutrition CREGS’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 25 (18 June 1976), 1. For further problems, see also ‘Three Diet/Nutrition RFPs Withdrawn Due to “Vagueness”; To Be Rewritten’, The Cancer Letter, 3, 27 (8 July 1977), 4; see also Carl G. Baker, ‘Cancer Research Program Strategy and Planning-The Use of Contracts for Program Implementation’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 59, 2 (supplement), (August 1977), 651–669. For a defence of contracts, see Frank J. Rauscher, ‘Budget and the National Cancer Program’, Science, 184 (1974), 871–5; DeVita et al., op. cit. (note 84), VI-11. More generally on peer review at the NIH, see Richard Mandel, A Half Century of Peer Review, 1946–1996, (Bethesda, MA: Division of Research Grants, National Institutes of Health, 1996). For the various review committees of the DNCP see Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, Status Report, op. cit. (note 68), A1-18.Google Scholar

87. Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, Status Report, op. cit. (note 68), 14–16. On CREG’s see ‘Cancer Research Emphasis Grants (CREG) Offered as a New Way to Fund Contract Research Efforts’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 42 (22 November 1974), 1–4; ‘Upton says NCI Division Directors Won’t Control Their Grants Budgets,’ The Cancer Letter, 4, 8 (24 February 1978), 6; National Cancer Institute, Office of the Director, Annual Report, 1 October 1977–30 September1978, Part I, 30 September 1978, NCI archives, item number PB034866; Arthur C. Upton, ‘Reorganization: Division of Cancer Cause and Prevention – Revised’, 19 July 1978, NCI archives: item number AR010422; Arthur C. Upton, ‘Reorganization of the Division of Cancer Treatment’, 21 June 1978, NCI archives: item number AR010435; Arthur C. Upton, ‘Reorganization – Division of Cancer Biology and Diagnosis’, 15 May 1978, NCI archives: item number AR010419; Arthur C. Upton, ‘Reorganization – Division of Cancer Control and Rehabilitation’, 28 August 1978, NCI archives: item number AR010404.Google Scholar

88. Minutes of the NCC are available in NIH Director’s Files, Executive Secretariat, Office of the Director, NIH, file location, COMM 2-13.Google Scholar

89. Gori interview, 6 November 2003, op. cit. (note 31). For a brief account of the NCC see ‘Statement of the Candlelighters’, op. cit. (note 26).Google Scholar

90. ‘O’Conor Named DCCP Director, Says He’ll Push Development of NCI’s Efforts in Epidemiology’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 17 (28 April 1978), 1–3.Google Scholar

91. ‘Gori Goes to Hopkins’, op. cit. (note 86).Google Scholar

92. On the McGovern Committee see Marion Nestle, Food Politics. How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002), ch. 1; and Gerald Oppenheimer and I. Daniel Benrubi, ‘Food Fight: The McGovern Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs and the Meat Industry’s Battle over the Diet-Heart Question, 1976–1977’, paper presented to the 84th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the History of Medicine, 28 April–1 May, 2011, Philadelphia.Google Scholar

93. ‘One-Third to One-Half of All Cancer Related to Diet, Gori Tells Senate’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 32 (6 August 1976), 3. A typescript of Gori’s 28 July 1976 statement to the select committee is available in ‘Statement by Gio B. Gori’, op. cit. (note 37) and in the George S. McGovern Papers, Mudd Library, Princeton University, Box 628. See also Gio B. Gori to George McGovern, date stamped 20 August 1976, and George McGovern memorandum to the President, 1976, both in George S. McGovern Papers, Mudd Library, Princeton University, Box 628. For other NCI documentation on the McGovern Committee see ‘1978 McGovern Committee Questions and Answers on Nutrition Research’, NCI archives: item number DC010295.Google Scholar

94. Wynder, Ernst L. and Gori, Gio B. , ‘Contribution of the Environment to Cancer Incidence: An Epidemiologic Exercise’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 58 (1977), 825832.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

95. Oppenheimer and Benrubi, op. cit. (note 92).Google Scholar

96. Nutrition and Cancer Research, op. cit. (note 41).Google Scholar

97. Nutrition and Cancer Research, op. cit. (note 41), 1–2.Google Scholar

98. ‘Upton Responds to McGovern Blast, Says NCI to Seek more Nutrition Research’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 25 (23 June 1978), 5–7.Google Scholar

99. Solberg, Carl , Hubert Humphrey: A Biography (New York: Norton, 1984; Bruce Miroff, The Liberals’ Moment: The McGovern Insurgency and the Identity Crisis of the Democratic Party (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2009); Jake H. Thompson, Bob Dole: The Republicans’ Man for all Seasons (New York: D.I. Fine Books, 1996).Google Scholar

100. ‘Gori Gets into Another Controversy’, op. cit. (note 82). For accounts of Gori’s and NCI’s work with the ‘safe cigarette’ see Mark Parascandola, ‘Lessons from the History of Tobacco Harm Reduction: The National Cancer Institute’s Smoking and Health Program and the “Less Hazardous Cigarette” ’, Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 7 (2005), 779–89; Mark Parascandola, ‘Science, Industry, and Tobacco Harm Reduction: A Case Study of Tobacco Industry Scientists’ Involvement in the National Cancer Institute’s Smoking and Health Program, 1964–1980’, Public Health Reports, 120 (2005), 338–49; Amy Fairchild and James Colgrove, ‘Out of the Ashes: The Life, Death, and Rebirth of the “Safer” Cigarette in the United States’, American Journal of Public Health, 94 (2004), 192–204. On Califano see Joseph A. Califano, Jr., Inside: A Public and Private Life (New York: Public Affairs, 2004).Google Scholar

101. ‘Gori Goes to Hopkins’, op. cit. (note 86). See also Parascandola, ‘Lessons from the History’, ibid. For O’Conor’s report on Gori’s move to Johns Hopkins see his response to a congressional enquiry from the office of Representative Lawrence H. Fountain (D-North Carolina), G.T. O’Conor memo, ‘Congressional Inquiry Received and Answered By Phone’, 19 September 1978, NCI archives: item number DC 003096.Google Scholar

102. ‘Gio Gori Accepts Franklin’, op. cit. (note 31). ‘Controversial Scientist Considers Leaving NCI’, Science, 208, 4440 (11 April 1980), 156.Google Scholar

103. The Division of Cancer Treatment, for example, took over treatment-related projects under the umbrella of the DNCP ‘DCT Board Approves New Contract Projects, Rejects Nutrition Proposal’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 43 (27 October 1978), 3–7; Diane J. Fink, ‘Presentation on the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program’, (n.d) (c. 1980), NCI archives: item number AR-8000-008051.Google Scholar

104. Newell, ‘Presentation to the National Cancer Advisory Board’, op. cit. (note 31), 2. Emphasis in the original..Google Scholar

105. Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program. Status Report, op. cit. (note 23), 37. Contracts were generally intended to fund support services, data acquisition, management of workshops and conferences, and, in some instances, special programmes such as the group of nutritional status reports then being initiated; Guy R. Newell, ‘Future Directions for NCI’s Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program’, NCI archives: item number AR008211. For later DNCP developments see ‘Nutrition May Get an Extra $4 Million in FY 1979; Program Announcement Describes Opportunities’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 38 (22 September 1978), 1–6. See also United States Congress Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, Subcommittee on Nutrition, Diet and Cancer Relationship: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Nutrition of the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, United States Senate, Ninety-sixth Congress, First Session on Diet and Cancer Research at the National Cancer Institute, Clinical Nutrition Research at the National Institutes of Health, and Problems with the Peer Review System at NIH, October 2, 1979 (Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1980).Google Scholar

106. Daniel S. Greenberg and Judith E. Randal, ‘Waging the Wrong War on Cancer’, Washington Post Outlook (1 May 1977) C1 & C4; Daniel S. Greenberg, ‘ “New Broom” at the Cancer Institute’, New England Journal of Medicine, 297, 12 (22 September 1977), 679–80; Daniel S. Greenberg, ‘Cancer: Now, the Bad News’, Washington Post Outlook (19 January 1975), CI and C4; see also Daniel S. Greenberg, The Politics of Pure Science (New York: New American Library, 1968). For a critical response to Greenberg see William S. Gray, ‘The Data…Tell Only Part of the Story’, Washington Post Outlook (19 January 1975) C4. For another report critical of the war on cancer see Robert Houston and Gary Null, ‘We are Losing the War against Cancer. A Long Day’s Dying’, Our Town(New York), 9, 26 (29 October–4 November, 1978), 6, 11, 25. Our Town was a local paper, not normally of wide circulation, but one correspondent, writing to alert the NCI and NIH of Houston and Null’s piece, noted: ‘This article received wide attention here because during the newspaper strike, literally everyone read this paper and similar ones that are normally neglected.’ Alton Meister (Department of Biochemistry, Cornell University Medical College) to Alan S. Rabson (Associate Director, Intramural Research, NCI), 7 November 1978, NCI archives: item number PB-004512.Google Scholar

107. Daniel S. Greenberg, ‘Nutrition, Stepchild of the Medical Sciences’, Washington Post (23 May 1978), reprinted in Nutrition and Cancer Research, op. cit. (note 41), 80–1.Google Scholar

108. Donald S. Frederickson, to Director NCI, 30 September 1977, NCI archives: item number AR-7709-009041. Ironically, Frederickson misused the myth of Cassandra. Her prophesies were true and accurate fore-tellings of the future: her curse was that no one believed her. For a rebuttal to Greenberg see ‘Rauscher Responds to Cancer Program Criticism Based on Survival Figures’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 12 (21 March 1975), 4–5, and Frank J. Rauscher, ‘The National Cancer Program: Now the Good News’, 9 May 1975, NCI archives: item number AR008015.Google Scholar

109. Any desires by the therapeutic lobby to jump ship may have been briefly held in check pending the outcome of criticism in 1977 of the clinical trials undertaken by the DNCP. In February 1977 the NIH’s clinical trials committee reviewed evidence that clinical trial designs would fail to provide meaningful statistical results. See Marvin A. Schneiderman memorandum to Robert Gordon, Subject, ‘Clinical Trials’, (18 February 1977), File Location: COMM 2-54, Work Folder: NIH 19423; Melvin S. Fish (Collaborative Programs Procedures Officer) memorandum to Associate Director for Collaborative Research, Subject: Procedural Deficiencies in the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, DCCP, NCI, 9 June 1977, File Location: COMM 2-54, Work Folder: NIH 19433; ‘Memo for the Record. Presentation by Dr. Gio Gori, NCI, of the NCI Clinical Trails on Nutrition and Cancer in Children and Adults’, 30 June 1977, File Location: COMM 2-54, Work Folder: NIH 19436. All in NIH Director’s Files, Executive Secretariat, Office of the Director, NIH.Google Scholar

110. On advocacy politics in relation to cancer see Maren Klawiter, ‘Risk, Prevention and the Breast Cancer Continuum: The NCI, the FDA, Health Activism and the Pharmaceutical Industry’, History and Technology, 18 (2002), 309–353; Lerner, Breast Cancer Wars, op. cit. (note 1). More generally see Judith Aliza Hyman Rosenbaum, ‘Whose Bodies? Whose Selves? A History of American Women’s Health Activism, 1968-Present’ (unpublished PhD Thesis: Brown University, 2004). On the longer history of women’s activism in regard to cancer see Kirsten E. Gardner, Early Detection. Women, Cancer, and Awareness Campaigns in the Twentieth-Century United States (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006).Google Scholar

111. ‘Newell tells Advisory Committee it isn’t a Lobbying Group’, op. cit. (note 80).Google Scholar

112. For a comment on the NIH as an admirable and effective ‘remnant of Renaissance patronage in the practice of modern science’, see J. Michael Bishop, How to Win the Nobel Prize: An Unexpected Life in Science (Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 2003), 49.Google Scholar

113. Note how Arthur Upton never refers to Gori in his oral history account of NCI diet and nutrition research in the 1970s. ‘NCI Oral History Project. Interview with Arthur C. Upton M.D., June 4, 1997, conducted by Gretchen A Case’, NCI archives: item number AR012235.Google Scholar

114. Quotation in Chris [Hitt] memorandum to Senator McGovern, 17 April 1978, George S. McGovern Papers, Mudd Library, Princeton University, Box 622. For other examples of continuing pressure on NCI to improve prevention efforts from Congress see ‘New Jersey Congressman Seeks to Push NCI into Greater Prevention Efforts’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 10 (10 March 1978), 3–5; ‘Cancer Act Renewal Cleared for Early Vote by House; Senate Bill Differs’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 32 (11 August 1978), 3–5; see also ‘NCI Must Play More Vigorous Role in Prevention, Upton Tells ACCC’, The Cancer Letter, 4, 5 (3 February 1978), 4; Gregory O’Conor noted he would include DNCP in a possible Prevention Branch see ‘O’Conor Named’, op. cit. (note 90), 2. Note that while research dollars were expected to drop in 1980, that nutrition research was to be an exception. ‘Research Contract Dollars Will Drop in 1980, But Will Increase Sharply For Some Programs’, The Cancer Letter, 2, 27 (7 July 1978), 1–5.Google Scholar

115. Richard Doll and Richard Peto, ‘The Causes of Cancer: Quantitative Estimates of Avoidable Risks of Cancer in the United States Today’, Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 66 (1981), 1192–1308. National Academy of Sciences, Diet, Nutrition and Cancer, Report of Committee of Diet, Nutrition and Cancer, Assembly of Life Sciences, National Research Council, (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1982). National Academy of Sciences, Diet, Nutrition and Cancer: Directions for Research, Report of Committee of Diet, Nutrition and Cancer, Assembly of Life Sciences, National Research Council (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1983); see Hilgartner, op. cit. (note 8).Google Scholar

Figure 0

Table 1: Gio Batta Gori’s appointments prior to joining NCI. Source: Gio Batta Gori, Resume (June 1968), NCI archives: item number DC-6800-006346.

Figure 1

Figure 1: Gio Batta Gori, c1975. Source: ‘Dr. Gio Gori Becomes Dep. Director of Cancer Cause, Prevention Div.’, The NIH Record, 27, 1 (14 January 1975), 7, courtesy of Rich McManus, editor of The NIH Record.

Figure 2

Table 2: Members of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme Advisory Committee.

Figure 3

Table 3: Gori’s proposed breakdown of the budget for DNCP, August 1975 (% $= $ percentage of the total DNCP budget). Source: ‘Nutrition Program Starts to Zero in on Mass of Data, Plan Contract and Grant Project Areas’, The Cancer Letter, 1, 35 (29 August 1975), 1–6: 2–3.

Figure 4

Table 4: Consequences of cancer treatment predisposing to nutrition problems. Source: Maurice E. Shils, ‘Nutritional Problems Arising from the Treatment of Cancer’, CA. A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 20 (1970), 188–96: 193.

Figure 5

Table 5: ‘DNCP Recommended and Actual Funds Allocation, Fiscal Year 1976’. Source: Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, Status Report and Working Papers for the Advisory Committee Meeting December 14–15, 1976, National Institutes of Health, Building 31, Wing C, Conference Room 10, Bethesda Maryland 20014 (Bethesda: National Cancer Program, 1976), 12.

Figure 6

Figure 2: NCI offices, divisions and programmes associated with the DNCP, 1974–78

Figure 7

Figure 3: Structure and framework of the Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Programme, 1978. Figures (a) and (b) provide two snapshots of the DNCP structure and framework as it evolved in 1978. Both illustrate the decentralisation of the programme after Newell took over, components of the programme being developed within the three divisions rather than by the DNCP Director. Figure (a) illustrates the structure of the DNCP as it was envisaged by Newell shortly after he took over in 1978, and includes the individuals responsible for the diet and nutrition research within each division, as well as the DCRRC (Division of Cancer Research Resources and Centres), the division responsible for managing NCI grant supported activities, including the review and coordination of programmes such as DNCP. Figure (b), which was published about the same time, provides a slightly different structure, and may be a later iteration, and sets out the research areas of each division and the relation of the DNCP to the NCI director. The absence of the DCRRC should not be taken as indicating that it had no review function in relation to the DNCP. Sources: Figure (a) Guy Newell, ‘Presentation to the National Cancer Advisory Board’, 18 September 1978, NCI archives: item number PB003861. The full names of the directors/officials are Guy R. Newell, Mildred Ellison, Thaddeus J. Domanski, Daniel L. Kisner and Lawrence D. Burke. There is no original paper copy of this document, and the quality of the PDF/photocopy image is very poor. This image has been enhanced for clarity by Hank Grasso. Figure (b) Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program. Status Report. September 1978 (Bethesda, MD: Diet, Nutrition and Cancer Program, September 1978), 26.