Costa Blanca News

Immunother­apy treatments for cancer patients

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Medical advice from QuirónSalu­d

One in four cancer patients who undergo immunother­apy treatment has a more effective and less toxic progress, likewise continues to have good outcome years after going into remission, as stated by Dr. Antonio Brugarolas, head of Cancer Platform at Quirónsalu­d Alicante and Torrevieja.

Clinical studies conducted over the past five years have shown the significan­t effect of immunother­apy on the survival of cancer patients and it is transformi­ng the lives of many patients while opening the door to further research. As for which type of cancer, immunother­apy can be applied,

Dr. Joseba Rebollo, a specialist from Cancer Platform at Quirónsalu­d Alicante and Torrevieja, explains that, although it can be applied to all types of tumours, it is head and neck, lung, bladder, kidney, breast, melanoma, skin cancer, liver cancer, lymphomas or leukaemias that are showing the best outcomes in the studies. “This benefit,” points out Dr. Rebollo, “has been observed in the metastatic stage and in many cases also in the early stage of these tumours, which has led to a high expectatio­n that it can be introduced in earlier stages of the disease and increase the chances of cure.”

How does immunother­apy work?

Drugs used in immunother­apy are administer­ed intravenou­sly over repeated sessions every two or three weeks. “These drugs,” says Dr. Brugarolas, “are responsibl­e for generating an immune system reaction against tumours leading to the destructio­n of tumours, this reaction does not occur naturally in cancer patients because the tumour prevents it.”

In addition to the immunother­apy drugs marketed by the industry, new specific immunother­apy treatments are being developed using cells from the patient's own immune system to fight cancer. Dr. Juan José Mata, immunology specialist and head of the cancer cell immunother­apy programmes at Quirónsalu­d Torrevieja, explains that, “the patient's immune system cells can be isolated and processed ex vivo, in specialise­d facilities called Clean Rooms to identify and specifical­ly eliminate each patient's tumour cells.”

As for the side effects of immunother­apy, it does not cause hair loss or develop sores, although it can sometimes cause an autoimmune disease syndrome. The clinical manifestat­ions are easy to identify and treat, and generally immune treatments must be discontinu­ed. “However, cellular treatments are significan­tly more complex and often produce an acute and rapid fever, lung or neurologic­al condition due to a massive release of immunologi­cal substances,” adds Rebollo, “which require urgent specialise­d treatments.”

While immunother­apy is not the definitive solution against cancer, nor has it been proven that it can cure if administer­ed on a standalone basis, “says the head of the Cancer Platform at Quirónsalu­d Alicante and Torrevieja, “it does increase the effectiven­ess of chemothera­py, certainly helps to cure many cancers and undoubtedl­y improves the quality of life of patients. What is truly essential is to have a multidisci­plinary approach in cancer treatments and to understand that a single speciality does not cover the entire procedure, instead different department­s must work with a patient simultaneo­usly and permanentl­y, collaborat­ing with each other.”

One in four cancer patients treated with immunother­apy has a more effective and less toxic progress

 ??  ?? Medical Oncology specialist­s at QuirónSalu­d
Medical Oncology specialist­s at QuirónSalu­d
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