Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Lung cancer drug brings new hope

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A GROUP of “unique” patients with advanced lung cancer appear to have won their battle for survival after treatment with a new immunother­apy drug.

On average, only 1% to 4% of people diagnosed with the highly aggressive disease are still alive five years later.

But 16 of 129 trial patients treated with the drug nivolumab, which helps the immune system fight cancer, have “beaten the odds” by surviving at least 58 months, doctors reported.

In all but four of these cases, evidence suggests that the disease was stopped in its tracks. No sign of worsening cancer was seen in the patients when their condition was last assessed.

One British expert described the results as a “landmark”.

Scientists are now trying to find out what made this small group of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) so special. Lead researcher Dr Julie Brahmer, director of the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center in the US, said: “A small subset of non-small cell lung cancer patients appear to respond to nivolumab and have beaten the odds that most patients with this cancer face.

“Now, we need to figure out how to make more patients responsive to immunother­apy by exploring combinatio­ns of immunother­apy drugs and other treatment agents.

“It’s clear the patients who beat the survival odds are in some ways truly unique biological­ly, and the goal now is to discover exactly how immunother­apy is keeping their disease in check.”

Nivolumab is one of a new generation of “checkpoint inhibitor” antibody drugs that block the ability of cancer to shield itself from the immune system.

Twelve of the 16 — nine men and seven women — who remained alive after five years required no further therapy after it was shown that their cancers had stopped progressin­g. The remaining four patients went on to chemothera­py or joined other clinical trials.

Based on the findings, the scientists estimated that 16% of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer who receive nivolumab could expect to survive five years or longer.

British expert Dr Alastair Greystoke said: “These data are a landmark step in this type of lung cancer and, for the first time, there is a renewed hope that we may see a significan­t shift in survival.”

Each year in the UK, more than 46,000 people are diagnosed with lung cancer, 90% of whom have NSCLC. More than 35,000 Britons were killed by lung cancer in 2014.

 ??  ?? THE series finale of Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway will be broadcast live from Walt Disney World in Florida this weekend, with up to 200 fans of the show joining the hosts.
The TV duo (pictured with Disney favourites Mickey and Minnie Mouse)...
THE series finale of Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway will be broadcast live from Walt Disney World in Florida this weekend, with up to 200 fans of the show joining the hosts. The TV duo (pictured with Disney favourites Mickey and Minnie Mouse)...
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A lung x-ray.

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