Chemotherapy-free ‘cancer vaccine’ moves from mice to human trials at Stanford

Authored by m.sfgate.com and submitted by huangsworld
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A recent Stanford cancer study that cured 97 percent of mice from tumors has now moved on to soliciting human volunteers for a new cutting-edge medical trial.

The trial is part of a gathering wave of research into immunotherapy, a type of treatment that fights cancer by using the body's immune system to attack tumors.

"Getting the immune system to fight cancer is one of the most recent developments in cancer," Dr. Ronald Levy, a Stanford oncology professor who is leading the study, told SFGATE. "People need to know that this is in its early days and we are still looking for safety and looking to make this as good as it can be."

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The treatment is not a true vaccine that creates lasting immunity, but it does feature a vaccine-like injection carrying two immune stimulators that activate the immune system's T cells to eliminate tumors throughout the body.

Each test subject receives a low dose of radiation plus two rounds of the injected agents, Levy said. No chemotherapy is involved.

The treatment does not work on all types of cancer, Levy said, because each type of cancer has a different set of rules regarding how it can be affected by the immune system.

For the current trials, he is only looking for people with low-grade lymphoma regardless if they have been previously treated. He said Stanford is planning on running two trials by the end of the year with a total of about 35 test subjects.

"The two drugs we are injecting are made by two different companies and have already been proven safe for people," Levy said. "It's the combination we are testing."

Side effects at this point include fever and soreness at the injection site but no vomiting, Levy said.

He said if the FDA does end up granting final approval, he wouldn't expect it any sooner than a year or two from now.

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While the vaccine approach to cancer is unique, Levy noted that one approved cancer drug for injection already exists for melanoma skin cancer.

Other limited approaches also currently exist in the expanding landscape for cancer immunotherapy. In 2017, the FDA approved a type of cell therapy for some types of leukemia and lymphoma known as CAR-T where a patient's immune cells are removed from the body, genetically engineered and reintroduced to attack the tumor cells.

Dr. Michelle Hermiston directs the pediatric immunotherapy program at UCSF, the first hospital in California to implement the treatment. She told SFGATE that CAR-T is currently being used as a third option for lymphoma and leukemia patients who have failed standard treatments like chemotherapy.

She said CAR-T is both labor intensive and very expensive — drugs alone cost half a million dollars — but that the new immunotherapy treatment has raised survival rates from about 10-15 percent to more than 60 percent.

the_original_Retro on March 28th, 2018 at 10:42 UTC »

I went looking for this part expecting to find it and did.

--> The treatment does not work on all types of cancer, <-- Levy said, because each type of cancer has a different set of rules regarding how it can be affected by the immune system.

It's really important to know HOW MANY DIFFERENT KINDS, and what kinds, of cancer this can treat, because there are a very large variety of them. 5%? 80%? How many of those are rare? Common?

The title of the article would be more accurate if it was 'vaccine for certain cancers'.

But, no question, this is still a bit of Uplifting News. Chemo is no fun.

Ake4455 on March 28th, 2018 at 10:09 UTC »

In most Zombie movies, the cancer vaccine is what eventually turns us all into Zombies...

NoTomorrowMusic on March 28th, 2018 at 06:18 UTC »

i’m so conditioned by reddit that i instinctively went to the comments to see why this isn’t groundbreaking and amazing