An article in the New England Journal of Medicine describes
how immunotherapy helped a 52-year-old man from Oregon cure his melanoma, which had spread
to a lung and to a lymph node in his groin.
Back in July 2005, the man enrolled in a clinical trial at
Fred Hutchinson’s Cancer Research Institute in Seattle, along with eight other men diagnosed
with cancer.
Dr. Cassian Yee, an associate member at the Center and the
author of the article in NEJM, along with his colleagues used immunotherapy, a
therapy in which our own immune system fights cancerous cells. More exactly,
the scientists looked for special immune system cells called CD4+T cells in a
blood sample provided by the melanoma patient, specifically the CD4+T cells
that target the patient’s melanoma.
Then, they isolated these cells and cloned them in five
billion clones in their lab over several months, which they put back into the
patient.
Surprisingly, the man responded remarkably well to this treatment.
Two months later, his cancerous tumors were no longer there and two years
after, the man remained disease-free.
However, the eight other patients enrolled in the experiment
did not have the same improvements as the Oregon man, as none had his cancer gone. Dr.
Yee couldn’t explain why the therapy had different results although used the in
the same way. Therefore, more study is needed “to confirm the effectiveness of
therapy,” Dr. Yee said.
Louis M. Weiner, MD, director of Georgetown
University’s Lombardi Comprehensive
Cancer Center,
shared the same opinion. In an editorial accompanying the study, he called the
case “remarkable,” but cautioned that this therapy might not always work as
cancers have many tactics to defeat the immune system.
However, the fact that this therapy worked, even if just in
one case, shows research seems to be heading in the right direction, giving
hope to so many people developing cancer every day.
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