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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, March 3, 2017
Cancer patients in ‘extraordinary’ gene therapy study in complete remission after one treatment
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scans show a 62-year-old man with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, at left in
December 2015, and three months after treatment with Kite Pharma's
experimental gene therapy at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston
An experimental gene therapy that turns a patient’s own blood cells into
cancer killers worked in a major study, with more than one-third of
very sick lymphoma patients showing no sign of disease six months after a
single treatment, its maker said Tuesday.
In all, 82 per cent of patients had their cancer shrink at least by half at some point in the study.
Its sponsor, California-based Kite Pharma, is racing Novartis AG to
become the first to win approval of the treatment, called CAR-T cell
therapy, in the U.S. It could become the nation’s first approved gene
therapy.
A hopeful sign: the number in complete remission at six months — 36 per
cent — is barely changed from partial results released after three
months, suggesting this one-time treatment might give lasting benefits
for those who do respond well.
“This seems extraordinary … extremely encouraging,” said one independent
expert, Dr. Roy Herbst, cancer medicines chief at the Yale Cancer
Center.
Cell therapy specialists prepare blood cells from a patient to be engineered in the lab to fight cancer
The worry has been how long Kite’s treatment would last and its side
effects, which he said seem manageable in the study. Follow-up beyond
six months is still needed to see if the benefit wanes, Herbst said, but
added, “this certainly is something I would want to have available.”
The therapy is not without risk. Three of the 101 patients in the study
died of causes unrelated to worsening of their cancer, and two of those
deaths were deemed due to the treatment.
It was developed at the government’s National Cancer Institute and then
licensed to Kite. The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society helped sponsor the
study.
Results were released by the company and have not been published or
reviewed by other experts. Full results will be presented at the
American Association for Cancer Research conference in April.
Related
The company plans to seek approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by the end of March and in Europe later this year.
The treatment involves filtering a patient’s blood to remove key immune system soldiers called T-cells, altering them in the lab to contain a gene that targets cancer, and giving them back intravenously. Doctors call it a “living drug” — permanently altered cells that multiply in the body into an army to fight the disease.
The treatment involves filtering a patient’s blood to remove key immune system soldiers called T-cells, altering them in the lab to contain a gene that targets cancer, and giving them back intravenously. Doctors call it a “living drug” — permanently altered cells that multiply in the body into an army to fight the disease.
Patients in the study had one of three types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a
blood cancer, and had failed all other treatments. Median survival for
such patients has been about six months.
Kite study patients seem to be living longer, but median survival isn’t
yet known. With nearly nine months of follow-up, more than half are
still alive.
Six months after treatment, 41 per cent still had a partial response
(cancer shrunk at least in half) and 36 per cent were in complete
remission (no sign of disease).
“The numbers are fantastic,” said Dr. Fred Locke, a blood cancer expert
at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa who co-led the study and has been a
paid adviser to Kite. “These are heavily treated patients who have no
other options.”
The numbers are fantastic. These are heavily treated patients who have no other option
One of his patients, 43-year-old Dimas Padilla of Orlando, was driving
when he got a call saying his cancer was worsening, chemotherapy was no
longer working, and there was no match to enable a second try at a stem
cell transplant.
“I actually needed to park … I was thinking how am I going to tell this
to my mother, my wife, my children,” he said. But after CAR-T therapy
last August, he saw his tumors “shrink like ice cubes” and is now in
complete remission.
“They were able to save my life,” Padilla said.
Of the study participants, 13 per cent developed a dangerous condition
where the immune system overreacts in fighting the cancer, but that rate
is lower than in some other tests of CAR-T therapy. The rate fell
during the study as doctors got better at detecting and treating it
sooner.
Roughly a third of patients developed anemia or other
blood-count-related problems, which Locke said were easily treated. And
28 per cent had neurological problems such as sleepiness, confusion,
tremor or difficulty speaking, but these typically lasted just a few
days, Locke said.
“It’s a safe treatment, certainly a lot safer than having progressive
lymphoma,” and comparable to combination chemotherapy in terms of side
effects, said the cancer institute’s Dr. Steven Rosenberg, who had no
role in Kite’s study. The first lymphoma patient Rosenberg treated this
way, a Florida man, is still in remission seven years later.
There were no cases of swelling and fluid in the brain in this or any
other study testing Kite’s treatment, company officials said. That
contrasts with Juno Therapeutics, which has had a CAR-T study put on
hold twice after five patient deaths due to this problem.
Company officials would not say what the treatment might cost, but other
types of immune system therapies have been very expensive. It’s also
being tested for some other types of blood cancer.
08:17ET 28-02-17