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Government scientists saved two men dying of melanoma by genetically altering their own white blood cells to attack their tumors — deemed the first major success in battling cancer with gene therapy.
Though the men appear disease-free almost two years after the experimental therapy, it wasn’t a panacea. Fifteen other melanoma victims weren’t helped. The National Cancer Institute is trying to strengthen the shots.
Still, specialists proclaimed the work, published today by the journal Science, an important advance — gene therapy with the potential to fight cancer’s worst stage, when it has spread through the body. The NCI hopes to begin testing it soon against cancers more common than melanoma, such as advanced breast or colon cancer.
Doctors can’t predict how the two men will fare long-term. Melanoma, the most aggressive skin cancer and killer of almost 8,000 Americans annually, is notorious for returning years after patients think they’ve subdued it.
“I’m cured for now,” is how a grateful Mark Origer, 53, of Watertown, Wis., put it after a checkup from NCI doctors this week.
The approach remains highly experimental, requiring years of additional research.
“Clearly this is a first step,” cautioned Dr. Len Lichtenfeld of the American Cancer Society. “We have to be very cautious about not raising hopes too much.”
Nevertheless, “it is exciting,” he added. “It certainly is a proof of [the] concept that this approach will work.”
“It’s one of the first documented, effective cases of cancer gene therapy working,” added Dr. Patrick Hwu, melanoma chairman at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, who once worked with the NCI team.
The NCI’s Dr. Steven Rosenberg has long led the tantalizing research field of how the body’s immune system might be harnessed to fight cancer. White blood cells called T-lymphocytes hunt down germs and other foreign tissue. Unfortunately, cancerous cells look a lot like healthy cells, making it hard for those T-cells to spot a problem.
By 2002, Dr. Rosenberg had made a breakthrough when he found small numbers of cancer-fighting T-cells inside some patients with advanced melanoma. He literally pulled those cells out of their blood and grew billions more of them in laboratory dishes, enough to have a chance at overwhelming a tumor. By suppressing the patients’ normal immune system to make room for the extra T-cells and then pumping them into the patients bodies, about half significantly improve.
Few melanoma patients make enough cancer-fighting T-cells naturally for scientists to cull any from their bloodstream, and T-cells that attack more common cancers are virtually impossible to find, so Dr. Rosenberg and colleagues set out to create tumor fighters from scratch.
The scientists took normal lymphocytes — ones that don’t recognize cancer — out of 17 patients with advanced melanoma who had exhausted their treatment options. In the lab, they infected those cells with a virus carrying genes that create T-cell receptors, essentially homing devices for, in this case, melanoma. (Different genes create receptors for other cancers.)
“We can take a normal cell from you or me or any patient and … convert that cell into a cell that recognizes the cancer,” Dr. Rosenberg explained.
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