Las Vegas Review-Journal

Las Vegan cancer trailblaze­r

73-year-old is first to get new drug trial for lymphoma

- By Mary Hynes Las Vegas Review-journal

A Las Vegas man is the first patient in the world to participat­e in a clinical trial of a treatment for a rare form of non-hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Fred Warnick, 73, began the drug trial in August at Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers of Nevada. The results so far have been promising.

“His lymph nodes are nearly shrunken down to normal,” said Dr. Anthony

Nguyen, Warnick’s oncologist. “He’s in near complete remission.”

Warnick was diagnosed in June with advanced stage 4 mantle cell lymphoma, a cancer of

the lymphocyte­s, a specific type of white blood cell. Lymphocyte­s are found in the lymph nodes, pea-sized glands in places such as the neck, groin and armpits.

Traditiona­l treatment can include “hard chemothera­py” delivered in a hospital and a bone marrow transplant requiring hospitaliz­ation for a month or longer, Nguyen said.

Instead, Warnick takes four pills a day of zanubrutni­b to inhibit the growth of cancer cells. Every 28 days, he receives intravenou­sly a drug called rituximab, which helps the immune system destroy cancer cells.

In an appointmen­t at a Comprehens­ive Cancer clinic on Wednesday, Warnick told Nguyen he was experienci­ng some insomnia but hadn’t lost his hair or appetite.

“I feel fine. I’m starting to get depressed I feel so good,” Warnick, a father of three, stepfather to three and grandfathe­r to 10, jokingly told a reporter.

In June, Warnick went to an urgent care center complainin­g of bloating and pain in his abdomen and legs. He later went to Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers, where the doctors found that he had cancer in his chest, abdomen, pelvis and “hiding in the kidneys,” Nguyen said.

Since treatment began in August, scans show not only that Warnick’s lymph nodes have shrunken to a normal size but that tumors in his armpit had disappeare­d.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion last month approved the use of zanubrutni­b for adult patients who already have undergone one form of treatment.

The current drug trial focuses on pairing zanubrutni­b and rituximab as the first line of treatment for patients over age 70, who might be more frail and less able to withstand other treatments, Nguyen said.

The trial is to be conducted at 206 sites across the globe, including 21 in the U.S. Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers was the first of the locations to activate the trial.

Comprehens­ive Cancer Centers is conducting 170 drug trials, said Nguyen, and the FDA has approved 86 drugs from its previous trials.

An increase in clinical trials locally means that fewer Southern

Nevadans need to go out-of-town for life-extending treatment, Nguyen said. Trial participan­ts also receive costly drugs free of charge.

Clinical trials “give us more options for our patients,” he said, “and more hope.”

Contact Mary Hynes at mhynes@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0336. Follow @Maryhynes1 on Twitter.

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