Trials show new cancer vaccine could improve patient survival for some lung cancers by nearly half

Authored by euronews.com and submitted by lukalux3
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A French biotechnology company said that its cancer vaccine was effective in decreasing the risk of death for people with some lung cancers by 41%.

A new vaccine has been shown to improve survival for people suffering from certain lung cancers, according to a French biotechnology company.

Ose Immunotherapeutics’ Tedopi vaccine has been shown to be effective in reducing mortality rates in certain lung cancers, the company said in a statement on Monday.

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in Europe and the US.

The results of a phase 3 clinical trial to evaluate the therapeutic benefits of the vaccine – the last step before a drug can be marketed – were published in the Annals of Oncology journal.

The vaccine was administered to patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC or adenocarcinoma), the most common type of lung cancer and one that is “usually less sensitive to chemotherapy and radiation therapy,” according to the US Cancer Institute.

41% decrease in risk of death

A total of 219 patients, all of whom had shown resistance to other treatments, took part in the study in nine European countries and the United States. There were 139 patients who received the vaccine and 80 who received chemotherapy.

The patients who received Tedopi showed a significantly higher survival rate and a better quality of life than those who received chemotherapy.

“A significant 41% reduction in the risk of death was observed, associated with an improved tolerance score and maintained quality of life,” said Professor Benjamin Besse from the Gustave Roussy Institute, the study’s lead author, in a statement.

Ose Immunotherapeutics’ vaccine was used in this trial as a third-line treatment, meaning that the patients had already received two other therapies.

“Further evaluation is clearly warranted in a second line of treatment of advanced and metastatic NSCLC, to potentially make this cancer vaccine available to hard-to-treat patients in failure and with high medical needs,” Besse added.

The Tedopi vaccine is effective in patients with the HLA-A2 gene, which is present in about half the population, according to Ose Immunotherapeutics.

It is administered initially every three weeks, then every eight weeks for one year, and then every 12 weeks.

Nicolas Poirier, the company’s CEO said the recent results of the different trials “highlighted the promise of this new therapeutic class of vaccines”.

Tedopi is a therapeutic cancer vaccine, not a preventive measure.

Therapeutic cancer vaccines aim to train the immune system to specifically recognise and destroy tumour cells. In other words, they use the patient’s own defence system to fight cancer.

The field of immunotherapy has made considerable advancements since the 2010s, and it has benefited from research during the pandemic, which "has accelerated the production of vaccines, specifically mRNA vaccines," according to Cancer Research UK.

Several immunotherapeutics treatments have since been approved, and research is still ongoing.

Earlier this year, the UK government signed an agreement with BioNTech to begin cancer vaccine trials, treating up to 10,000 patients by 2030.

According to Market Future Insight, the global cancer vaccines market is expected to be worth €22 billion in 2033, despite the expensive costs of the treatments.

The value of Ose Immunotherapeutics’ shares rose by 60 per cent on the Paris Stock Exchange the day following the announcement of the trial results.

Whygoogleissexist on September 17th, 2023 at 15:36 UTC »

The results are not as impressive as the headline suggests. 80% of subjects were dead regardless of the vaccine by 24 months.

Here is the paper. https://www.annalsofoncology.org/article/S0923-7534%2823%2900790-1/fulltext

Responsible_Heart365 on September 17th, 2023 at 14:22 UTC »

I’ve long ago read that Cuba had or has a vaccine against certain types of lung cancer. This is also good news.

strongwordsla on September 17th, 2023 at 13:29 UTC »

My dad exposed me to secondhand smoke the whole time I was growing up. Like, smoking in the car with the windows rolled up because he didn’t want to get cold while on long drives. Chain smoking inside the house to the extent that I smelled like smoke at school and my teachers commented on it. I don’t know if my dad didn’t believe secondhand smoke was harmful, or if he just didn’t care. I hated it, but there was nothing I could do. I’ve never smoked a cigarette, but 18 years of damage has been done.

I’ve been very scared of one day dying from lung cancer. This article is very good news.