The Daily Telegraph

Herpes virus has major impact on tumours

Terminal patient told there were no options left hails therapy that ‘totally eradicated’ his disease

- By Sarah Knapton Science editor

Terminally ill cancer patients have seen their tumours completely eradicated or shrunk after being treated with a geneticall­y-engineered version of the herpes virus. Scientists at the Institute for Cancer Research in London have developed a new therapy that infects and destroys cancer cells while also rallying the immune system. In early trials to assess its safety, one quarter of patients with end-of-life cancer saw tumours stop growing, shrink or disappear completely.

TERMINALLY ILL cancer patients have seen their tumours completely eradicated or shrunk after being treated with a geneticall­y-engineered version of the herpes virus.

Scientists at the Institute for Cancer Research (ICR) in London have developed a new therapy which infects and destroys cancer cells while also rallying the immune system.

In early trials to assess the safety of the therapy, one quarter of patients with end-of-life cancer saw their tumours stop growing, shrink or disappear completely.

Krzysztof Wojkowski, 39, a builder from west London – who had no treatment options left after developing a salivary gland tumour – has been cancer-free for two years since taking part in the trial at the Royal Marsden in London in 2020.

“I was told there were no options left for me and I was receiving end-of-life care,” he said.

“I had injections every two weeks for five weeks which completely eradicated my cancer.

“I’ve been cancer-free for two years now. It’s a true miracle – there is no other word to describe it.

“I’ve been able to work as a builder again and spend time with my family. There’s nothing I can’t do.”

The geneticall­y engineered virus – called RP2 – is injected directly into the tumour, where it multiplies, causing cancer cells to burst from within.

It also blocks a protein called CTLA-4 which dials down the immune system, and so gives the body more of a chance to fight off the cancer.

In addition, the virus also produces molecules which spark the immune system into action against cancer.

The therapy was tested on 39 patients with cancers including skin, oesophagea­l and head and neck cancer who had exhausted all other treatments.

Results showed that around one quarter saw a benefit. Study leader Kevin Harrington, professor of biological cancer therapies at the ICR, said: “Our study shows that a geneticall­y engineered, cancer-killing virus can deliver a one-two punch against tumours – directly destroying cancer cells from within while also calling in the immune system against them.

“It is rare to see such good response rates in early-stage clinical trials, as their primary aim is to test treatment safety and they involve patients with very advanced cancers for whom current treatments have stopped working.

“Our initial trial findings suggest that a geneticall­y engineered form of the herpes virus could potentiall­y become a new treatment option for some patients with advanced cancers – including those who haven’t responded to other forms of immunother­apy.

“I am keen to see if we continue to see benefits as we treat increased numbers of patients.”

The research was presented at the European Society for Medical Oncology Congress (ESMO), and the team are hoping to move to bigger trials.

‘I’ve been cancer free for two years now. It’s a true miracle, there is no other word to describe it’

The herpes simplex virus is a common infection, which many people carry latently without problems.

Researcher­s looked at patient biopsies before and after RP2 injections and found positive changes in the tumour’s “immune microenvir­onment” – the area immediatel­y around the tumour.

Injections led to more immune cells in the area, including CD8+ T-cells, and “switched on” genes linked to the “anti-cancer” immune response.

The team found that most sideeffect­s of RP2 were mild – some of the most common were fever, chills, and fatigue. None of the side-effects was serious enough to require medical interventi­on.

Prof Kristian Helin, chief executive of ICR, said: “Viruses are one of humanity’s oldest enemies, as we have all seen over the pandemic.

“But our new research suggests we can exploit some of the features that make them challengin­g adversarie­s to infect and kill cancer cells.”

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