Yorkshire Post

Cancer cured by new treatment

- DON MORT HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT ■ ■ Email: Twitter: don.mort@jpress.co.uk @Exp_Don

HEALTH: Hopes have been raised of a breakthrou­gh in the treatment of advanced cancers after a woman appeared to have been cured by a method which harnessed her own immune system.

The success of the experiment­al treatment has been described as “fascinatin­g and exciting” by British experts.

HOPES HAVE been raised of a breakthrou­gh in the treatment of advanced cancers after a woman appeared to have been cured by a method which harnessed her own immune system.

The success of the experiment­al treatment on her drugresist­ant breast cancer has been described as “fascinatin­g and exciting” by British experts.

Doctors in the US combined two different forms of immunother­apy after convention­al treatments failed. Writing in the journal Nature

Medicine, the research team said the unnamed 49-year-old woman had been disease-free for almost two years after the treatment halted the rapidly-spreading cancer in her liver.

Professor Alan Melcher, from the Institute of Cancer Research in London, said: “This treatment represents a remarkable success in terms of translatin­g our basic biological understand­ing of how the immune system responds to cancer into a real treatment of real benefit.”

Peter Johnson, Professor of Medical Oncology at Southampto­n General Hospital, said: “This is another piece of evidence confirming that some cancers are recognisab­le by the body’s immune system and that if this can be stimulated in the right way, even cancers that have spread to different parts of the body may be treatable.”

The patient spent 10 years without cancer after having her left breast removed.

But then the disease returned with a vengeance and failed to respond to multiple hormonal and chemothera­py treatments.

The US team, led by Dr Steven Rosenberg, from the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, removed immune system “T-cells” from the cancerous breast tissue, multiplied them in a laboratory and injected the cells back into the bloodstrea­m.

They also developed “checkpoint inhibitors” designed to overcome a cancer’s ability to shield itself from the immune system.

Dr Simon Vincent, director of research at charity Breast Cancer Now, said: “This is a remarkable and extremely promising result, but we need to see this effect repeated in other patients before giving hope of a new immunother­apy for incurable metastatic breast cancer.

“This is a hugely exciting first in the treatment of advanced breast cancer. But it has only been shown to work in a single patient and we now need larger trials to investigat­e how the T-cell therapy and ‘checkpoint inhibitors’ have worked together to attack the secondary tumours.”

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