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‘Slow but sure’ progress to less toxic tools vs cancer

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BALTIMORE — John Ryan is just one of the miracles to emerge from the Johns Hopkins cancer unit in Baltimore. An immunother­apy treatment — highly effective in a minority of patients — saved his life after a lung cancer diagnosis.

The retired military nuclear reactor specialist will celebrate his 74th birthday in July, and his battle with cancer illustrate­s the promises and failures of immunother­apy, a burgeoning field in which the pharmaceut­ical industry is investing heavily.

Ryan has been able to attend the graduation­s of three of his children, and will take part in the wedding of one of his daughters this summer — even though doctors expected he had just 18 months to live in June 2013.

“That’s exciting stuff to be around for,” he said.

But he knows of plenty people who have not been so lucky.

“In five years, I have lost a lot of dear friends.”

Immunother­apy is one of two major categories of drugs against cancer. The best-known is chemothera­py, which has been used for decades and aims to kill tumors but is so toxic that it also attacks healthy cells, leading to major side effects like weakness, pain, diarrhea, nausea, and hair and weight loss.

Ryan went through all that in 2013, and his tumor persisted.

Exhausted by chemo and wracked with pain, Ryan was accepted into a last-ditch clinical trial using nivolumab (brand name Opdivo) in late 2013.

The drug was delivered intravenou­sly at the hospital, at first every two weeks, then once a month.

His tumor rapidly disappeare­d, and 104 injections later, the main side effect has been itching.

Recently, a mysterious mass appeared in his right lung. It was treated with radiation.

“They shot me with chemo, it almost killed me. And now I have been sucking up immunother­apy, and it’s been good. My quality of life has been great,” said Ryan.

RELATIVELY FEW PATIENTS

Immunother­apy trains the body’s natural defenses — immune cells, also known as T-cells — to detect and kill cancer cells, which otherwise can adapt and hide.

Some experts are cautious, having been disappoint­ed numerous times by other newfangled approaches to fighting cancer.

But many consider immunother­apy as a turning point. More than 30 immunother­apy drugs are in developmen­t, and 800 clinical trials are underway, according to Otis Brawley, medical director of the American Cancer Society.

Ryan’s oncologist, Julie Brahmer, said she now starts about a third of her lung cancer patients on immunother­apy first, not chemo.

It helps that the Baltimore facility has numerous clinical trials under way, far more than the average US hospital.

Doctors are intrigued by the unusually long remissions seen in a small number of patients like Ryan. These success stories make up about 10% to 15% of patients, said William Nelson, director of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehens­ive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins.

Normal remissions typically last a year and a half to two years.

Chemothera­py and radiation are still the most dominant tools.

But in recent years, a series of clinical trials have shaken up the cancer world, showing it was possible to better treat and even cure some of the most difficult forms of cancer without resorting to the most toxic techniques.

PERSONALIZ­ED TREATMENTS

A spectacula­r example concerns prostate cancer.

Researcher­s have found that recommenda­tions of regular screening had the opposite effect of what was intended: too many tumors that would never have spread were being treated in operations.

Regarding breast cancer, a major study published in early June at the American Society of Clinical Oncology conference showed that for tens of thousands of women, surgery and hormone therapy were enough to keep cancer away. Chemothera­py was being given unnecessar­ily, they found, in a finding that surprised the cancer community.

Meantime, genetic analyses are becoming ever more common for tumors, allowing more precise and rapid treatments for patients.

Johns Hopkins has a genomic lab specially designed to help doctors personaliz­e patient treatments, rather than basing treatment simply on the location of the tumor.

“At this point we have better and better tools to say, ‘Yes, he needs to be treated, you don’t,’” said Nelson.

Some cancers, including brain cancer, remain on the margin of these new treatments.

But for leukemia, breast, lung, cervical, colon and rectal cancer, as well as the serious skin cancer known as melanoma, immunother­apy and other personaliz­ed treatments are making progress “slowly but surely,” said Nelson.

For oncologist Julie Brahmer’s part, she hopes that one day, metastatic cancers — those that can spread to points distant from the site of origin — will be treated like a “chronic disease,” rather than a death sentence.

John Ryan has a simpler objective in mind.

“My goal is to die of something other than lung cancer,” he said. —

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