Business Standard

Gene-altering leukemia cure may create ‘living drugs’

- DENISE GRADYJULY 15 July

AFood and Drug Administra­tion panel opened a new era in medicine on Wednesday, unanimousl­y recommendi­ng that the agency approve the first-ever treatment that geneticall­y alters a patient’s own cells to fight cancer, transformi­ng them into what scientists call “a living drug” that powerfully bolsters the immune system to shut down the disease.

If the FDA accepts the recommenda­tion, which is likely, the treatment will be the first gene therapy ever to reach the market. Others are expected: Researcher­s and drug companies have been engaged in intense competitio­n for decades to reach this milestone. Novartis is now poised to be the first. Its treatment is for a type of leukemia, and it is working on similar types of treatments in hundreds of patients for another form of the disease, as well as multiple myeloma and an aggressive brain tumour.

To use the technique, a separate treatment must be created for each patient — their cells removed at an approved medical center, frozen, shipped to a Novartis plant for thawing and processing, frozen again and shipped back to the treatment center.

A single dose of the resulting product has brought long remissions, and possibly cures, to scores of patients in studies who were facing death because every other treatment had failed. The panel recommende­d approving the treatment for B-cell acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia that has resisted treatment, or relapsed, in children and young adults aged 3 to 25.

One of those patients, Emily Whitehead, now 12 and the first child ever given the altered cells, was at the meeting of the panel with her parents to advocate for approval of the drug that saved her life. In 2012, as a 6-year-old, she was treated in a study at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. Severe side effects — raging fever, crashing blood pressure, lung congestion — nearly killed her. But she emerged cancer free, and has remained so.

“We believe that when this treatment is approved it will save thousands of children’s lives around the world,” Emily’s father, Tom Whitehead, told the panel. “I hope that someday all of you on the advisory committee can tell your families for generation­s that you were part of the process that ended the use of toxic treatments like chemothera­py and radiation as standard treatment, and turned blood cancers into a treatable disease that even after relapse most people survive.”

The main evidence that Novartis presented to the F.D.A. came from a study of 63 patients who received the treatment from April 2015 to August 2016. Fifty-two of them, or 82.5 per cent, went into remission — a high rate for such a severe disease. Eleven others died.

“It’s a new world, an exciting therapy,” said Gwen Nichols, the chief medical officer of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, which paid for some of the research that led to the treatment.

The next step, she said, will be to determine “what we can combine it with and is there a way to use it in the future to treat patients with less disease, so that the immune system is in better shape and really able to fight.” She added, “This is the beginning of something big.”

At the meeting, the panel of experts did not question the lifesaving potential of the treatment in hopeless cases. But they raised concerns about potentiall­y life-threatenin­g side effects — short-term worries about acute reactions like those Emily experience­d, and longerterm worries about whether the infused cells could, years later, cause secondary cancers or other problems.

In studies, the process of reengineer­ing T-cells for treatment sometimes took four months, and some patients were so sick that they died before their cells came back. At the meeting, Novartis said the turnaround time was now down to 22 days.

Analysts predict that these individual­ised treatments could cost more than $300,000, but a spokeswoma­n for Novartis, Julie Masow, declined to specify a price.

 ??  ?? Analysts predict that these individual­ised treatments could cost more than $300,000
Analysts predict that these individual­ised treatments could cost more than $300,000

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