Daily Mail

Immunother­apy ‘can double the survival time for cancer patients’

- By Kate Pickles Health Reporter

CANCER patients should be given immunother­apy as the first line of treatment following the results of ‘gamechangi­ng’ trials, charities say.

Patients undergoing the new type of treatment – which harnesses the immune system so it targets and destroys only cancer cells – typically lived longer with fewer reports of the cancer returning.

A study involving people with advanced stage lung cancer found it almost doubled their survival time, while another revealed that immunother­apy treatment shrank tumours before surgery.

Further trials will test the methods on patients with bowel and ovarian cancer.

Dr Roy Herbst, a lung cancer specialist at Yale Cancer Centre, who was not involved in the studies, said it could be the start of a fundamenta­l change in treatment. ‘I’ve never seen such a big paradigm shift as we’re seeing with immunother­apy,’ he said.

The series of studies was yesterday presented at the American Associatio­n of Cancer Research in Chicago.

In one, scientists at New York University conducted a study involving more than 600 patients with advanced lung cancer.

Two thirds were given a combinatio­n of both immunother­apy drugs and chemothera­py while the remaining patients were given chemothera­py and a placebo. The estimated survival after a year was 69 per cent in those taking the immunother­apy drugs compared to 49 per cent who only had chemothera­py.

A separate study by Johns Hopkins University and the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre tested the immunother­apy drug, nivolumab, on 21 patients about to have surgery for non-small-cell lung cancer.

In 45 per cent of cases, it not only started to shrink the tumour but turned it into an ‘auto-vaccine’, activating T cells, which circulated the body to attack cancer cells.

After 18 months, recurrence-free survival was 73 per cent compared to the clinical average of around 50 per cent.

Dr Sung Poblete, president of Stand Up To Cancer, which funded this research, said: ‘It may be a game-changer. This notion of “cancer intercepti­on” has the potential to stop cancer in its tracks.’

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