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-   -   cancer breakthrough using immune system (https://her2support.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=35399)

sarah 09-05-2008 01:58 AM

cancer breakthrough using immune system
 
Friend sent me this, it talks about skin cancer but has hope for more:
Wellington's Malaghan Institute welcomes cancer breakthrough
20 June, 2008

The Malaghan Institute in
Wellington has welcomed the breakthrough treatment of a patient with advanced skin cancer, using the patient's own immune system cells.

The medical research behind the successful treatment, carried out in
Seattle, matches the work that the Malaghan Institute is doing to develop immune system-based therapies and vaccines.

Institute director Professor Graham Le Gros says the breakthrough treatment is a dramatic demonstration of the power of immune therapies.

"Our challenge now is to harness this potent effect in other patients, and against other cancers."

In the
Seattle case, a 52-year-old cancer patient has made a full recovery after being injected with billions of his own immune cells in the first case of its kind. The patient, who had not responded to other treatments including surgery and chemotherapy, was free from tumours within eight weeks of undergoing the procedure.

The Malaghan Institute,
New Zealand's leading immunology research centre, is hosted at VictoriaUniversity's Kelburn campus. Its core work revolves around harnessing the immune system to fight illness and disease.

Clinical research fellow Dr Robert Weinkove says "What is special about this report is the dramatic nature of the response. The patient had a very advanced stage of melanoma, which is incurable using conventional methods such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy. The response to the immune therapy was both rapid and long lasting. The researchers were able to demonstrate that the cloned cancer-reactive cells persisted for at least three months in the patient's blood stream.

"Importantly, after the treatment, the patient also developed his own ‘natural' immune response against the cancer, suggesting that he may now be cured.

"The cancer-reactive cells were grown in a specialised research laboratory. For this type of treatment, the cells need to be generated specifically for each patient. The methods used would be difficult to apply to large numbers of patients outside of a trial, because of the time and expense involved.

"Crucially, this study provides proof of principle that immune therapies can cure cancer, even in patients with advanced disease. The challenge is now to replicate this achievement in other patients, and to develop simpler and faster ways to achieve these results.

"At the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research we are researching and trialing immune therapies by vaccination with dendritic cells, the white blood cells which control lymphocytes. We believe that this approach will generate responses against a wide range of cancers."

The Malaghan Institute of Medical Research is an independent medical research centre based in
Wellington, New Zealand. Researchers at the MIMR aim to harness the immune system to treat disease. The MIMR has a dedicated cancer vaccine research laboratory with the facilities to generate personalised cancer vaccines for patients. The MIMR is currently involved in a cancer immune therapy trial for glioblastoma, a malignant brain tumour.

Dr Robert Weinkove is a Clinical Research Fellow in the Cancer Immunotherapy Research Group at the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research. He is also a Haematology Registrar at the Wellington Blood and Cancer Centre. He trained at the
University of Cambridge and at Guy's and St Thomas' Hospitals in London, and is researching cancer immune therapies and chronic lymphocytic

leukaemia.
Contact : Dr. Robert Weinkove Email : rweinkove@ malaghan.org.nz Téléphone : +64 4 499 6914 ext. 851

eric 09-05-2008 05:29 AM

Love the sound of this. Thanks, Eric

Faith in Him 09-05-2008 10:59 AM

This sounds promising. Thanks for sharing.

Tonya

AlaskaAngel 09-05-2008 11:26 AM

Truly fascinating
 
What was so interesting to me about this study is that unlike studies using mice that have never had chemo and still have intact immune systems to begin with, this effort offers more hope that those who have had chemo and do not have intact immune systems may possibly still benefit from such a method.

Thanks much,

AlaskaAngel

mts 09-05-2008 11:40 AM

Here is a link to a ovarian cancer vaccine trial conducted at UPenn... it really explains how the immunotherapeutic vaccines really work ... pretty easy reading

http://www.pennhealth.com/feature/



juanita 09-05-2008 12:41 PM

Thanks for sharing this info!

Joan M 09-05-2008 02:54 PM

Thanks for bringing this study to the board's attention. It sounds promising.

goops 09-05-2008 07:30 PM

This is sensational - may they quickly move to breast cancer in testing this.


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