The Borneo Post

Drug gives lung cancer patients four extra months

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PARIS: Most lung cancer patients survived four months longer on an immunother­apy drug than those treated with chemothera­py, according to trial results published Monday.

Impor t a nt ly, t hey a l so experience­d fewer side- effects, researcher­s reported in The Lancet medical journal.

Patients with non- small- cell lung cancer — which represents by far the majority — survived for 13.8 months on average on the drug called atezolizum­ab, compared to 9.6 months for those on chemothera­py, the study authors said.

And the difference was likely even bigger, as several participan­ts on chemothera­py were given immunother­apy after the trial ended, possibly boosting their survival.

“Atezolizum­ab reinvigora­tes patients’ immune systems against cancer,” the study’s lead author Achim Rittmeyer of the University of Goettingen in Germany, said in a statement.

“Our trial has shown that this has significan­t results for their survival.”

Lung cancer is the most common cancer, affecting some 1.8 million people in the world every year, said Rittmeyer.

It is also the leading cause of cancer death in the world.

According to the American Cancer Society, 80- 85 yesterday of lung cancers are non-small- cell types.

The trial recruited 850 patients without any remaining treatment options, and compared how long they survived — half on atezolizum­ab and the rest on chemothera­py, the standard treatment.

Immunother­apy trains people’s immune systems to attack tumour cells without killing healthy cells.

Chemothera­py, in contrast, targets all fast- dividing cells in the body, good and bad alike.

Unlike viruses or bacteria, cancer cells are not intruders but our own cells gone haywire, which explains why they circulate undisturbe­d by the immune system.

Still in its in fancy, immunother­apy — including atezolizum­ab — is being tested on many cancer types.

In October, America’s Food and Drug Administra­tion fast-tracked atezolizum­ab for the treatment of patients with non-small- cell lung cancer.

“The time in which chemothera­py will no more be the mainstay of treatment of metastatic non- small- cell lung cancer is perhaps not so far away,” Elisabeth Quoix of France’s Strasbourg University Hospital wrote in a comment on the study, also carried by The Lancet. — AFP

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