Medicine Hat News

All respond to gene therapy in a blood cancer study

- MARILYNN MARCHIONE

CHICAGO

Doctors are reporting unpreceden­ted success from a new cell and gene therapy for multiple myeloma, a blood cancer that's on the rise. Although it's early and the study is small — 35 people — every patient responded and all but two were in some level of remission within two months.

In a second study of nearly two dozen patients, everyone above a certain dose responded.

Experts at an American Society of Clinical Oncology conference in Chicago, where the results were announced Monday, say it's a first for multiple myeloma and rare for any cancer treatment to have such success.

Chemothera­py helps 10 to 30 per cent of patients; immune system drugs, 35 to 40 per cent at best, and some genetarget­ing drugs, 70 to 80 per cent, “but you don't get to 100,” said Dr. Len Lichtenfel­d, deputy chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society.

“These are impressive results” but time will tell if they last, he said.

Multiple myeloma affects plasma cells, which make antibodies to fight infection. More than 30,000 cases occur each year in the United States, and more than 115,000 worldwide.

Nine new drugs have been approved for it since 2000 but they're not cures; only about half of U.S. patients live five years after diagnosis.

With cell therapy, “I can't say we may get a cure but at least we bring hope of that possibilit­y,” said Dr. Frank Fan. He is chief scientific officer of Nanjing Legend Biotech, a Chinese company that tested the treatment with doctors at Xi'an Jiaotong University. HOW IT WORKS The treatment, called CAR-T therapy , involves filtering a patient's blood to remove immune system soldiers called T cells. These are altered in a lab to contain a gene that targets cancer and then given back to the patient intravenou­sly.

Doctors call it a “living drug”- a onetime treatment to permanentl­y alter cells that multiply in the body into an army to fight cancer. It's shown promise against some leukemias and lymphomas, but this is a new type being tried for multiple myeloma, in patients whose cancer worsened despite many other treatments. THE STUDIES In the Chinese study, 19 of 35 patients are long enough past treatment to judge whether they are in complete remission, and 14 are. The other five had at least a partial remission, with their cancer greatly diminished. Some are more than a year past treatment with no sign of disease.

Most patients had a group of side effects common with this treatment, including fever, low blood pressure and trouble breathing. Only two cases were severe and all were treatable and temporary, doctors said.

The second study was done in the U.S. by Bluebird Bio and Celgene, using a cell treatment developed by the National Cancer Institute. It tested four different dose levels of cells in a total of 21 patients. Eighteen are long enough from treatment to judge effectiven­ess, and all 15 who got an adequate amount of cells had a response. Four have reached full remission so far, and some are more than a year past treatment. WHAT EXPERTS SAY The results are “very remarkable” not just for how many responded but how well, said Dr. Kenneth Anderson of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

“We need to be looking for how long these cells persist” and keep the cancer under control, he said.

Dr. Carl June, a University of Pennsylvan­ia researcher who received the conference's top science award for his early work on CAR-T therapy, said “it's very rare” to see everyone respond to a treatment. His lab also had this happen - all 22 children testing a new version of CAR-T for leukemia responded, his colleagues reported at the conference.

“The first patients we treated in 2010 haven't relapsed,” June said.

Dr. Michael Sabel of the University of Michigan called the treatment “revolution­ary.”

“This is really the epitome of personaliz­ed medicine,” extending immune therapy to more types of patients, he said.

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