Daily Mail

New cancer treatment... using cancer survivor cells

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent c.fernandez@dailymail.co.uk

A RADICAL new cancer treatment inspired by patients who seem to ‘shrug off’ the disease could be tested next year.

The technique uses potent cancer-killing cells from people with the strongest immune systems.

These ‘neutrophil’ cells – which form part of the body’s first line of defence – are then multiplied millions of times and injected into cancer patients.

They are believed to be a key reason why rare individual­s spontaneou­sly reject lethal cancers and seem to have ‘miracle recoveries’.

Following experiment­s with mice, a British company is now preparing for early trials of the neutrophil treatment on a small number of patients.

Alex Blyth, chief executive of Lift BioScience­s, said: ‘We’re not talking about simply managing cancer. We’re looking at a curative therapy that you would receive once a week over the course of five to six weeks.

‘Based on our laboratory and mouse model experiment­s we would hope to see patients experienci­ng complete remission. Our ultimate aim is to create the world’s first cell bank of powerful cancer-killing neutrophil­s.’

The team – along with researcher­s from King’s College London – is initially focusing on pancreatic cancer, which is among the most lethal forms.

Each year around 9,618 people in the UK are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and 8,817 die from the disease – which has a five-year survival rate of less than 3 per cent.

Early laboratory tests have also shown that neutrophil­s can kill cervical cancer cells.

Mr Blyth said key advantage of neutrophil­s is that a donor’s cells can be given to anyone without fear of serious rejection. They live in the body for only five days and disappear before the recipient’s immune system has chance to respond.

Neutrophil­s kill cancer cells either directly, by destroying them with chemicals and antibodies, or indirectly by recruiting other immune cells.

There is evidence that neutrophil­s may sometimes not recognise cancer as ‘foreign’ and can even shield tumours from other immune responses.

But when they do target cancer, they are highly efficient – wiping out 95 per cent of test cancer cells in 24 hours. It is neutrophil­s with this ability that form the basis of the new therapy.

The Lift team has collected thousands of the cells discarded as a waste product by blood banks, and is mass-screening them for their cancer-killing potential in a laboratory.

Those that pass the test are cultured and multiplied many times over using a secret process. The researcher­s are also working on a way of altering them to become even more potent.

Professor Farzin Farzaneh, who is leading the research at King’s College, said: ‘I was initially sceptical when Lift BioScience­s approached us. It is something I don’t believe has been done before, and producing these specific cells with cancer-killing ability is a notion we had not thought of. We are excited by the early results.’

The pilot trials, potentiall­y starting in a year’s time, would involve a small group of 20 to 40 patients with pancreatic cancer, or possibly a rare form of soft tissue cancer.

Each participan­t would receive weekly infusions of potent neutrophil­s. One patient’s treatment would require around 2.5billion of the cells.

So far Lift BioScience­s has received no government money and raised around £250,000 for early research from drug giants Merck, MedCity which provides support for life sciences, and crowdfundi­ng.

‘We hope to see complete remission’

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