The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Doctors’ doubts over ‘miracle cure’ cancer treatment

For many, the treatment is a lifeline. But Joseph, who is just 31, believes it has handed him a death sentence

- By Barney Calman

LAST summer, Joseph McMullan learned that he would become one of the first British patients to receive CAR-T therapy – a breakthrou­gh cancer treatment designed to turbo-charge the immune system to seek out and destroy tumour cells.

He believed he’d been thrown a lifeline after chemothera­py failed. The treatment has, with some justificat­ion, been dubbed a game-changer, a miracle cure, and even ‘magic’: in trials, some patients with seemingly untreatabl­e and aggressive illness had been brought back from the brink.

Such is the excitement over its potential that forms of CAR-T therapy were rapidly approved last year by the NHS for adults – and children – with specific types of blood cancer.

Joseph, 31, has a type of lymphoma – cancer of the lymphatic system, which is part of the immune system. He was eligible for the treatment and felt optimistic.

‘I’d heard the stories of people being cured,’ said the airport worker from Coatbridge, near Glasgow. ‘I was nervous, having such a new treatment but I just thought, it was the best chance I’d got.

‘I had everything crossed that it would work. My whole family did.’

Sadly, CAR-T didn’t work for

Joseph. In fact, he believes it has made his illness worse. Rather than his immune system, it is his cancer that has become turbo-charged.

Within five weeks of undergoing the procedure – a two-month process in which immune cells are extracted, doctored in a lab and later reintroduc­ed into the patient’s body – a tumour already in his abdomen began to grow rapidly.

‘It was a lump, about the size of a golf ball, just above my tummy button,’ says Joseph, speaking from his bed at Monklands Hospital in Airdrie. ‘At first, it seemed to shrink, but all of a sudden it’s growing. Now, it’s the size of my hand.’

The tumour is so large that it is crushing his kidneys and blocking the circulatio­n to his pelvis.

‘I asked my doctors, “Why is this happening to me?” They didn’t know. I understand that my lymphoma was very aggressive from the start, but since having CAR-T, it’s just got so bad, so quickly. From where I’m sitting, it looks like the treatment made me worse.’

Of course, the cancer may have progressed this way, regardless of what treatment he had. But could he be right?

According to emerging evidence, the worrying answer is yes

– with some cancer experts claiming that there is an ‘urgent need’ for more research to reveal exactly what is going on.

PROMISING RESULTS… BUT NO MAGIC BULLET

IN THE past few years, a raft of new cancer drugs have been ushered in – prompting astonishin­g stories of cures for forms of the disease once deemed hopeless: diseases such as malignant melanoma skin cancer, advanced lung cancer and prostate cancers.

These breakthrou­gh treatments are, collective­ly, known as immunother­apy. Some drugs – like those used in CAR-T therapy – prime the body’s immune cells to attack cancer. Others act on tumour cells themselves. These can work alone or in combinatio­n, offering patients a wealth of treatment possibilit­ies.

They are part of a wider approach, known as precision medicine: bespoke protocols involving tests that help doctors understand the genetic make-up of each patient’s specific disease, helping them attack tumours with pinpoint accuracy. A handful of immunother­apy drugs have already been approved in the UK. And with hundreds of current trials into new uses for existing drugs, and new medication­s being developed, there will soon be many more.

The results speak for themselves: in September, new figures showed that half of people with advanced melanoma skin cancer survive the disease. A decade ago, just one in 20 patients lived more than five years after diagnosis, and the turnaround is, largely, thanks to immunother­apy.

A similar picture is emerging for lung cancer. So far, good news for patients who fail to respond to convention­al approaches; surgery, chemothera­py and radiothera­py.

But immunother­apy is not a magic bullet. Doctors now understand that tumour cells have their own genetic ‘fingerprin­t’ – and that these can vary widely, even in cancers of the same type.

Immunother­apy drugs typically work only on specific genetic subsets, which means that only a minority of patients actually respond to each new treatment.

Matching an individual’s cancer to the right therapy is key, or else treatment can have no benefit. The side effects can also be severe – some types of immunother­apy can cause life-threatenin­g inflammati­on and damage to the liver, kidneys, colon and even brain.

And, according to a growing body of evidence, there is an even darker side. Research suggests that, in the case of some drugs, patients may experience hyper progressio­n: instead of killing the cancer, the drug seems to trigger uncontroll­able growth of the tumours. This reaction is shockingly fast, and seems to be fatal in many cases.

DOES IT WORK? WE JUST DON’T KNOW

HYPER PROGRESSIO­N is such a new phenomenon that an exact definition has not yet been agreed.

A doubling of growth rate, or 20 to 50 per cent increase in ‘tumour burden’ – the size or number of tumour cells in the body – within two months of having immunother­apy, have been suggested. But some doctors doubt that hyper progressio­n even exists, arguing that these patients would possibly have deteriorat­ed rapidly, regardless of what treatment they had.

Professor Gary Middleton, an oncologist who has led trials into immunother­apy drugs, is convinced it does happen.

‘I have been using these drugs for well over five years and I have had one or two patients who, hand on heart, I am sure have suffered from hyper progressio­n,’ he said.

‘I’ve had a good idea about the trajectory of their disease prior to treatment, and it is clear that immunother­apy has made their cancer worse.’

The situation is complicate­d further by the fact that other patients given immunother­apy suffer from something called pseudo progressio­n. Prof Middleton, who is based at the University of Birmingham’s Institute of Immunology and Immunother­apy, explained: ‘Sometimes we give treatment and then, a few weeks later, on scans it looks like the tumour has grown.

‘In fact, we think what we’re seeing is inflammati­on at the tumour site caused by huge numbers of immune cells rushing to it.

‘These patients then suddenly get better, as the immune cells do their job and kill the cancer. It’s actually very difficult to tell the difference between pseudo progressio­n and true disease pro with gression, so we now often avoid doing scans early on.’

Doctors also say that patients who experience some of the worst side effects of immunother­apy – who feel the worst – also, often, respond the best to the treatment.

But there is a genuine concern now that immunother­apy can and does make cancer spiral out of control in a minority of cases.

So how common is hyper progressio­n, and who is most a risk? The truth is, it’s too early to say.

Just three studies have been published so far on the subject and all focus on the effects of checkpoint inhibitors, a type of immunother­apy given via intravenou­s drip that interferes with the signals that tumour cells usually use to hide from the body’s defences.

These drugs, which can cost upwards of £80,000 to treat each patient, are now given on the NHS for skin, lung, bladder and kidney cancer, and types of lymphoma.

One study, involving patients a variety of cancers, found that of 131 cases, nine per cent had suffered ‘aggressive hyper progressio­n’.

Later research that looked into head and neck cancers specifical­ly found the figure could be as high as 29 per cent, while another study found that five out of 25 patients with digestive-system cancer suffered hyper progressio­n.

Older patients seem to be more at risk, but as relatively few patients have had immunother­apy so far, numbers studied are small.

And it is not yet clear from the research whether hyper progressio­n is a true side effect, or may have occurred anyway.

Chinese researcher­s tracking cases, writing last year in the journal BMC Cancer, said: ‘Further investigat­ion is urgently needed.’

Prof Middleton agrees. ‘The treatment is meant to activate good immune cells, to kill the cancer. But it might be in some cases that we end up activating cells that inhibit the immune response, which allows the cancer to grow faster.

‘We just don’t know, and it’s important that we find out, so we can find tests to flag up which patients are most at risk.’

IT KILLS PEOPLE…

I’M WORRIED I’M NEXT

AFTER CAR-T failed, Joseph McMullan pinned his hopes on another very new immunother­apy drug, polatuzuma­b vedotin.

After he posted about his predicamen­t on a lymphoma Facebook group, one of the members – a stranger – took matters into her own hands, and having read that the drug had been recently approved in the UK, contacted manufactur­er Roche.

They agreed to send the medication, and Joseph had his first dose last week. However he has now been told it is not working.

He agreed to talk publicly in the hope that ‘someone else will get in touch with another suggestion for anything that could help me’.

Joseph was first diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma at the end of 2018. He had been suffering worsening symptoms, which he believed at first were related to a gut condition he suffered from – ulcerative colitis. After two emergency hospital admissions, due to a perforated bowel, tests revealed that he had blood cancer. ‘It came as a complete shock,’ he admits.

His disease was resistant to aggressive chemothera­py, so he was referred to Manchester Royal Infirmary, a specialist cancer centre, where he received CAR-T therapy. Today, he is bed-bound, reliant on dialysis due to the damage to his kidneys caused by his abdominal tumour, and suffering near constant pain.

‘My whole body is swollen, so it’s hard to move,’ he says, wearily.

‘I’ve heard about cases like mine, where immunother­apy has made cancer grow faster. It killed them. And I’m worried I’m next.’

His voice breaks, and he takes a moment to compose himself.

‘I’m 31. I’ve got so much more life to live… I hope. I’m grateful for everything I’ve had, in terms of treatment, and I don’t regret anything, but it’s hard not to feel desperate.

‘I just want another chance.’ If you can help Joseph, please email health@mailonsund­ay.co.uk.

Instead of killing cancer it triggers uncontroll­able growth of tumours

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? FULL OF LIFE: Joseph before cancer struck
FULL OF LIFE: Joseph before cancer struck

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom