Google – AFP, Kerry Sheridan (AFP), 20 February 2014
File
picture shows a leukemia patient at a hospital in the eastern Ukrainian
city of
Donetsk (AFP/File, Alexander Khudoteply)
|
Washington
— A new approach to killing cancer cells that uses a patient's own immune
system has beaten back leukemia in 88 percent of adults, US researchers said.
The report
by scientists in New York offers more good news for the burgeoning field of
cancer immunotherapy, which uses what some describe as a "living
drug" that was hailed by Science magazine as the breakthrough of 2013.
The latest
trial, published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, involved 16
people with a kind of blood cancer known as adult B cell acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (ALL).
File
picture shows a group of Chinese
children suffering from leukemia attending
a fund-raising event to help their families
pay for their treatment, in Hefei,
east
China's Anhui province (AFP/File)
|
For this
study, 14 of 16 adult patients achieved complete remission after their T cells
were genetically engineered so that they could focus on eradicating cancer.
The
patients' median age was 50, and they were all on the brink of death when they
entered the trial, having relapsed or discovered that chemotherapy was no
longer working.
The longest
remission among them so far is about two years, and that patient is still going
strong, said lead author Renier Brentjens, director of cellular therapeutics at
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
Without
this therapy, just 30 percent of relapsed patients would be expected to respond
to salvage chemotherapy.
-
'Re-educating' T cells -
The process
involves removing some of the patient's T-cells and altering them with a gene
to make them recognize a protein, known as CD19, on the cancer cells, so that
they can attack them.
Left to
their own devices, T cells can attack other harmful invaders in the body but
will allow cancer to grow uninterrupted.
"Basically,
what we do is re-educate the T cell in the laboratory with gene therapy to
recognize and now kill tumor cells," Brentjens said.
Graphic
outlining the trial process of genetically modifying the immune
system to fight
against leukemia (AFP graphic, John Saeki/Adrian Leung)
|
After 15
years of work on the technology, known as tumor-targeted chimeric antigen
receptor modified T cells, "it seems to really work in patients with this
particular type of cancer," Brentjens told AFP.
Last year,
his team reported the first promising results in five adult patients who
achieved remission after the therapy.
He
estimated that between 60 and 80 people in the United States have since entered
experimental trials of the new treatment, which is also being studied in
Europe.
- 'Not a
fluke' -
In December
2013, experts from multiple US centers where trials are ongoing presented their
findings at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting, including
the University of Pennsylvania, which is also studying the approach in adults
with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia is enrolling pediatric patients in trials
of T-cell therapy.
Brentjens
said other US centers have shown similar remission rates in their studies so
far, "demonstrating that this isn't a fluke."
"This
is a real phenomenon," he told AFP. "This could be a paradigm shift
in the way we approach cancer therapy."
File
picture shows a young leukemia
patient being treated in a hospital in
the
eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk
(AFP/File, Alexander Khudoteply)
|
Rai, who
was not involved in the research, noted that it has been a few years since
scientists first reported on their initial success against CLL.
"In
the present report, we are told that equally dramatic and excellent results
were obtained when a more frightening and fatal disease, such as adult ALL was
the enemy," said Rai.
Researchers
are still trying to figure out why it does not work in all patients.
Efforts are
also ongoing to identify cancer-specific receptor cells that could allow the
technique to tackle other types of tumors.
"The
expansion to other kinds of cancers is next on the to-do list," said
Brentjens.
In the
meantime, the therapy remains expensive, costing around $100,000 per patient, a
price tag experts believe will come down once pharmaceutical companies get more
involved and the technique becomes more widespread.
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