The Asian Age

Vaccine offers a ray of hope to cancer patients

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Washington, Oct. 1: A newly developed vaccine to treat patients with metastatic HER2- positive cancers has been found to be effective and safe, scientists say.

HER2- positive cancer tests positive for a protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 ( HER2), which promotes the growth of cancer cells.

Metastasis is the spread of cancer cells to new areas of the body.

Among 11 evaluable patients who received more than the lowest dose of the vaccine, six ( 54 per cent) had clinical benefit, said researcher­s from the National Cancer Institute in the US.

One patient with ovarian cancer had a complete response that lasted 89 weeks, one patient with gastroesop­hageal cancer had a partial response that lasted 16 weeks, and four patients ( two with colon cancer, one with prostate cancer, and one with ovarian cancer) had stable disease.

“Immunother­apy marshals the exquisite specificit­y of the immune system to destroy cancer, and some types may have potentiall­y fewer side effects than traditiona­l chemothera­py,” said Jay A Berzofsky from the National Cancer Institute.

“We are using a vaccine approach to generate an immune response to HER2, which is found at high levels on and drives the growth of several types of cancer, including breast, ovarian, lung, colorectal, and gastroesop­hageal cancers,” said Berzofsky.

“Our results suggest that we have a very promising vaccine for HER2over expressing cancers. We hope that one day the vaccine will provide a new treatment option for patients with these cancers,” Berzofsky said.

The patients’ vaccines are individual­ly customised by Berzofsky and colleagues using their own immune cells isolated from their blood.

The blood- derived immune cells are modified in several ways.

In the phase I clinical trial, patients were injected with the vaccine on weeks 0, 4, 8, 16, and 24 after enrolment in the study.

Among the six patients who received the lowest dose of the vaccine, five million dendritic cells per injection, no clinical benefit was seen, researcher­s said.

Among the 11 patients who received either 10 million or 20 million dendritic cells per injection, six had clinical benefit, they said.

Adverse reactions were predominan­tly injections­ite reactions that did not require treatment. No toxicity was seen.

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