Malta Independent

First cancer ‘living drug’ gets go-ahead

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The US has approved the first treatment to redesign a patient’s own immune system so it attacks cancer.

The regulator - the US Food and Drug Administra­tion - said its decision was a “historic” moment and medicine was now “entering a new frontier”.

The company Novartis is charging $475,000 for the “living drug” therapy, which leaves 83% of people free of a type of blood cancer.

Doctors in the UK said the announceme­nt was an exciting step forward.

The living drug is tailor-made to each patient, unlike convention­al therapies such as surgery or chemothera­py.

It is called CAR-T and is made by extracting white blood cells from the patient’s blood.

The cells are then geneticall­y reprogramm­ed to seek out and kill cancer.

The cancer-killers are then put back inside the patient and once they find their target they multiply.

Dr Scott Gottlieb, from the FDA, said: “We’re entering a new frontier in medical innovation with the ability to reprogram a patient’s own cells to attack a deadly cancer.

“New technologi­es such as gene and cell therapies hold out the potential to transform medicine and create an inflection point in our ability to treat and even cure many intractabl­e illnesses.”

The therapy, which will be marketed as Kymriah, works against acute lymphoblas­tic leukaemia.

Most patients respond to normal therapy and Kymriah has been approved for when those treatments fail.

Dr Stephan Grupp, who treated the first child with CAR-T at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, said the new approach was “enormously exciting”.

“We’ve never seen anything like this before,” he added.

That first patient had been near to death, but has now been cancer-free for more than five years.

Out of 63 patients treated with CAR-T therapy, 83% were in complete remission within three months and long-term data is still being collected.

However, the therapy is not without risks.

It can cause potentiall­y lifethreat­ening cytokine release syndrome from the rapid proliferat­ion of the CAR-T cells in the body. This can be controlled with drugs.

But the potential of CAR-T technology goes beyond one type of cancer.

Dr David Maloney, medical director of cellular immunother­apy at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, said the FDA’s decision was a “milestone”.

He added: “We believe this is just the first of what will soon be many new immunother­apy-based treatments for a variety of cancers.

CAR-T technology has shown most promise against different blood-based cancers.

However, it has struggled against “solid tumours” such as lung cancer or melanoma.

Dr Prakash Satwani, a paediatric oncologist at Columbia University Medical, said: “The results haven’t been that great when you compare it with acute lymphoblas­tic leukaemia, but I’m sure the technology will get better in the near future.”

Boosting the immune system is already a cornerston­e of modern cancer treatment.

A range of drugs that “take the brakes off” the immune system to allow it to attack cancer more freely have already been adopted around the world.

CAR-T technology, which goes a step further and redesigns the immune system, is at a much earlier stage.

Prof Peter Johnson, the chief clinician at the charity Cancer Research UK, said: “The first geneticall­y modified cell therapy to be approved by the FDA is an exciting step forward.

“We still have a lot to learn about how to use it safely and who might benefit from it, so it is important to recognise this is just a first step.”

We’ve never seen anything like this before

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