The Columbus Dispatch

Measles vaccine wiped out cancer

- By Dan Browning (MINNEAPOLI­S) STAR TRIBUNE

MINNEAPOLI­S — Stacy Erholtz was out of convention­al treatment options for blood cancer last June when she underwent an experiment­al trial at the Mayo Clinic that injected her with enough measles vaccine to inoculate 10 million people.

Now, the 50-year-old is part of medical history.

The cancer, which had spread widely through her body, went into complete remission and was undetectab­le in Erholtz’s body after just one

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dose of the measles vaccine, which has an uncanny affinity for certain kinds of tumors.

Erholtz was one of just two subjects in the experiment and the only one to achieve complete remission. But the experiment provides the “proof of concept” that a single, massive dose of intravenou­s viral therapy can kill cancer by overwhelmi­ng its natural defenses, according to Dr. Stephen Russell, a professor of molecular medicine who spearheade­d the research at Mayo.

“It’s a landmark,” Russell said last week. “We’ve known for a long time that we can give a virus intravenou­sly and destroy metastatic cancer in mice. Nobody’s shown that you can do that in people before.” Until now. The research, published online on Wednesday in Mayo Clinic Proceeding­s, represents a “benchmark to strive for and improve upon,” according to an accompanyi­ng editorial by Dr. John C. Bell of the Center for Innovative Cancer Research in Ottawa.

“Without trying to hype it too much, it is a very significan­t discovery,” Bell said.

The next step is a bigger trial to see whether the measles blitzkrieg works in a larger number of patients — a trial that Mayo expects to launch no later than September.

Researcher­s have known for decades that viruses can be used to destroy cancer. They bind to tumors and use them as hosts to replicate their own genetic material; the cancer cells eventually explode and release the virus.

Antiviral vaccines that have no one has shown this type of systemic activity (seen in the Mayo study),” he said.

The Mayo research also could help solve a related puzzle. Researcher­s have suspected for some time that there is a threshold level of virus that is required to defeat the defense mechanisms in cancerous tumors, Bell said, and the Mayo

The cancer, which had spread widely through Stacy Erholtz’s body, went into complete remission and was undetectab­le in her body after just one dose of the measles vaccine, which has an uncanny affinity for certain kinds of tumors.

been rendered safe can produce the same effects and also can be modified to carry radioactiv­e molecules to help destroy cancer cells without causing widespread damage to healthy cells around the tumors. The body’s immune system then attacks any remaining cancer that carries remnants of the vaccine’s genetic imprint.

Researcher­s worldwide are working with a variety of cancer-killing viruses, including herpes and poxvirus, and they have produced long-lasting cures in rodent studies, Bell noted in his editorial. “Many have been tried in humans, but study helps set the bar.

In addition, various viruses show an affinity for particular organs, Russell said. Pneumonia and influenza, for example, damage the lungs. Hepatitis damages the liver.

“We have a virus that can do that selectivel­y to a tumor without at the same time causing damage to normal tissues in the body,” Russell said.

The strain that Russell used was isolated in 1954 from the throat of an 11-year-old boy named David Edmonston and has been used to safely make all of the measles vaccines used in the West, he said. The virus treats multiple myeloma tumors as food and turns them into machines to make copies of itself.

Most people have been inoculated with the vaccine, rendering it vulnerable to their immune systems. But patients with multiple myeloma often have suppressed immune systems, which can allow the virus to do its work.

The normal dose of vaccine contains 10,000 infectious units of the measles virus, Russell said. Mayo started out giving patients 1 million infectious units and gradually cranked up the dosage — but it didn’t work until Erholtz and another patient were injected with 100 billion infectious units, he said.

While the treatment worked in Erholtz, whose tumors were primarily in her bone marrow, the results weren’t sustained in the second patient, whose tumors were largely confined to her leg muscles. Russell said researcher­s need to study how the nature of the tumor affects the lethality of the virus.

“I think if we had been able to give bigger dose, we might have got a better outcome in that second patient,” he said.

But at least for now, there’s no second chance. Once the vaccine has been delivered, the body’s immune system will recognize it and attack it. Russell said breaking down the immune system before the treatment will be part of another upcoming clinical trial.

Researcher­s also might be able to bypass the immune system by taking a patient’s cells and converting them into Trojan horses. The virus is loaded into the cells, and they are injected back into the bloodstrea­m. “That way it doesn’t get destroyed before it reaches its target,” Russell said.

At the James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute in Columbus, Dr. Tanios BekaiiSaab is working on a study to treat pancreatic cancer using Reolysin, a proprietar­y variant of the virus that causes the common cold.

Researcher­s, he said, have two primary approaches: Inject the virus directly into tumors to get past their defenses or inject it into the bloodstrea­m and hope it will seek out tumors and overwhelm them, as was done in the Mayo study.

After reading a draft of the Mayo study, Bekaii-Saab called it “an incredibly innovative way to actually attack the cancer and perhaps even offer a better chance at complete remission,” especially in combinatio­n with radioactiv­e molecules and immune system therapy.

He cautioned that the study still must be confirmed in clinical trials — the point where many hopes get dashed.

“Unless we get to the third stage of developmen­t, we are only cautiously optimistic,” he said.

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