Lethbridge Herald

Discoverie­s that revolution­ized cancer treatments win Nobel Prize

- Jim Heintz and Lauran Neergaard

Two researcher­s from the U.S. and Japan won the Nobel Prize in medicine on Monday for discoverie­s that have revolution­ized cancer care, turning the body’s immune system loose to fight tumours in an approach credited with saving an untold number of lives.

James Allison of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center and Tasuku Honjo of Kyoto University learned how cancer can put the brakes on the immune system — and how to release those brakes.

Their work, conducted separately during the 1990s, led to the developmen­t of drugs known as “checkpoint inhibitors,” first used to treat the deadly skin cancer melanoma but now used for a growing list of advanced-stage tumours.

The drugs marked an entirely new way to treat tumours, a kind of immunother­apy that doctors could add to their standard arsenal of surgery, radiation and chemothera­py.

The research was “a landmark in our fight against cancer,” the Nobel Assembly of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute said in announcing the award. The two scientists will share the 9-million-kronor ($1.01million) prize.

“Not all patients respond to this, but for the ones that do, it has made a huge difference to their lives,” Dr. Arlene Sharpe, co-chair of microbiolo­gy and immunobiol­ogy at Harvard Medical School, told The Associated Press. “There are patients over a decade ago who had an incredibly poor prognosis and now, a decade out, they are living normal lives.”

Dr. Jedd Wolchok, chief of the melanoma and immunother­apeutics service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, said: “An untold number of lives ... have been saved by the science that they pioneered.”

Indeed, a drug based on Honjo’s research was used to treat former President Jimmy Carter, who was diagnosed in 2015 with melanoma that had spread to his brain. A year later, he announced he no longer needed treatment.

Allison, 70, who was in a New York hotel for a scientific meeting, said at a news conference that the Nobel committee evidently had trouble reaching him to break the news. But his cellphone lit up with a call from his son at 5:30 a.m., when the names of the winners were released.

And soon, “there were people beating on my door at 6 in the morning with champagne,” he said.

At a news conference in Kyoto, Honjo, 76, told how a member of his golf club once walked up to thank him for the discovery that was used to treat his lung cancer.

“He told me, ‘Thanks to you I can play golf again,’” he recalled. “That was a blissful moment. A comment like that makes me happier than any prize.”

Scientists had been trying for a century to harness the immune system against cancer, but it was a struggle. Normally, key immune system soldiers called T cells seek out and attack invaders. But for poorly understood reasons, it was hard to rev them up against cancer.

In an interview Monday, Allison said he wasn’t trying to cure cancer but to understand how T cells work when, at the University of California, Berkeley, he was studying a protein named CTLA-4. He learned the protein could put the brakes on T cells, creating what’s called an immune “checkpoint.”

He then created an antibody that blocked the protein’s action — in other words, it released the brakes so the T cells could do their job.

Working separately, Honjo discovered another protein, called PD-1, that also hampers T cells’ ability to attack cancer, but in a somewhat different way.

Allison’s research led to developmen­t of the drug Yervoy, approved in 2011 after studies showed it extended the survival of some patients with late-stage melanoma. A few years later, developers created drugs that release the PD-1 brake Honjo discovered — Keytruda and Opdivo, now commonly advertised on TV.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? James Allison, one of the 2018 Nobel Prize winners for medicine, speaks during a press conference, Monday, in New York. Allison and Tasuku Honjo won the Nobel Prize in medicine on Monday for discoverie­s that help the body marshal its cellular troops to attack invading cancers.
Associated Press photo James Allison, one of the 2018 Nobel Prize winners for medicine, speaks during a press conference, Monday, in New York. Allison and Tasuku Honjo won the Nobel Prize in medicine on Monday for discoverie­s that help the body marshal its cellular troops to attack invading cancers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada