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Biotechnology company Antigenics Inc
announced on Monday that its experimental cancer treatment extended survival in
a small study of patients with brain cancer. The study, presented at the annual
meeting of the Society for Neuro-Oncology in Las Vegas, has shown that patients who were
vaccinated with Oncophage following brain cancer surgery lived on average for
10.5 months. The trial has involved twelve people.
The vaccine has proven to be “incredible
safe” with no significant side effects, the authors noted. Four patients in the
study lived for about 12 months, one lived for 2.5 years. Previous studies have
shown that patients who survived after brain cancer treatment lived an average
of 6.5 months.
“This study demonstrated significant
tumor-specific immune responses leading to a proliferation of T-cells which did
not exist in these patients before vaccination,” said Parsa, associate professor
at the University of California, San
Francisco. Parsa said these patients are the most
challenging to treat because their survival is typically three to six months. Phase
II of the study is scheduled to begin this year, with the results being
presented early in 2009.
The National Cancer Institute plans to
sponsor two new trials of the vaccine, one in children and the other in adults. The
company is testing the vaccine against seven types of tumours, including
cancers of the skin, colon, pancreas and kidney.
Glioma is the most common type of brain
cancer; 19,000 cases occur in the United States each year, according
to the National Cancer Institute. Surgery is the standard first treatment for
these patients.
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