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Cancer-Fighting Cells
Associated Press - direct feed | September 19, 2002 | PAUL RECER

Posted on 09/19/2002 8:24:53 AM PDT by NYer

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Flooding the body with laboratory-engineered white blood cells shriveled melanoma tumors in a small group of seriously ill patients, leaving some virtually free of the disease, according to researchers at the National Institutes of Health.

A team led by Dr. Steven A. Rosenberg of the National Cancer Institute used amplified lymphocytes _ the body's white blood cells _ to attack melanoma tumors in 13 patients. Ten of those patients are still alive, four are ``virtually cancer free'' and two others have experienced ``substantial'' shrinkage of their tumors, Rosenberg said.

Rosenberg, who has spent years developing ways to enlist the body's own immune cells to fight cancer, said his team has learned how to grow huge numbers of cancer-fighting cells within the patient, enough to overwhelm the tumors. ``The major difficulty is to get enough immune cells to react against the cancer,'' he said. In previous efforts, researchers were able to prompt a small fraction of the immune cells injected into the body to attack the cancer and then only briefly. ``We would end up with a half percent (of the total immune cells) and they are gone two weeks later,'' he said. ``With the current approach, we can get 90 percent of the body's lymphocytes to react against the cancer.''

The research, to be published Friday in the electronic version of the journal Science, was described as ``an important advance'' by others in the field. ``This demonstrates something that has not been shown before in therapy using immune cells,'' said Dr. Cassian Yee, a researcher who has experimented with a similar technique at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. ``It is important because they showed they could grow significant numbers of T-cells in patients that could recognize tumors. In terms of using T-cells (lymphocytes) to treat melanoma, it is an important advance.''

The body makes T-cells that will attack cancer, but the natural number is seldom large enough to check the disease's progression. To amplify these cells, Rosenberg and his group removed cancer-killing T-cells from the patients and then grew the cells until there were billions. The researchers then made room for the new cells by treating the patients with chemotherapy to suppress the body's natural T-cell count. After injections of interleukin-2, a protein that stimulates lymphocytes, more than 70 billion of the special T-cells were injected into the patients where the cells multiplied rapidly. ``For the first time we've been able to get the cells that we give to survive and grow inside the body,'' Rosenberg said. ``When it does that, it attacks the cancer and causes the cancer to shrink.''

The results were striking and swift, the researcher said. ``A young boy we treated two years ago had two pounds of tumor and he's now disease free,'' Rosenberg said. He added that cancer is undetectable in two others, while tumors are 99 percent gone in another. For two others, Rosenberg described the results as ``substantial regression.'' Three of the original 13 patients have died, he said.

Rosenberg said the special T-cells persist in the body, with some patients testing at 75 percent to 80 percent levels seven months after therapy. The lymphocytes combat cancer by attacking antigens on the melanoma tumor cell surface. A normal cell which makes pigmentation in the body has this same antigen. As a result, in some patients the lymphocytes attacked normal cells, causing a type of mild autoimmune disease.

Rosenberg said four patients developed white patches on the skin where the T-cells killed the pigmentation. The color in the eye of one patient was also attacked, causing an inflammation of the iris. The condition is now being controlled with steroid drops, said Rosenberg, ``and his vision is normal.'' Although the technique has been used only against melanoma, a deadly skin cancer, Rosenberg said it may work against other types of cancer. His group is now preparing to test it against breast, prostate and ovarian tumors.

Rosenberg emphasized that immune cell therapy against cancer is still ``highly experimental'' and at least two years away from being ready for general cancer patients. ``We're still improving it. We're still trying to understand why it works in some patients and not others,'' he said. ``It is certainly not ready for widespread use, but it is being developed for that purpose.''

On the Net:

Science: www.sciencexpress.org

National Cancer Institute: www.nci.nih.gov

AP-ES-09-19-02 0210EDT


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cancer; melanoma; whitecells
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His group is now preparing to test it against breast, prostate and ovarian tumors.

This is very encouraging news. Please bump your lists.

1 posted on 09/19/2002 8:24:53 AM PDT by NYer
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To: Siobhan; american colleen; sinkspur; livius; Lady In Blue; Salvation; Polycarp; narses; ...
In case you know someone who could benefit from this new technology.
2 posted on 09/19/2002 8:25:58 AM PDT by NYer
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To: NYer
Flooding the body with laboratory-engineered white blood cells...

Creating an over-abundance of white blood cells... isn't this something similar to leukemia?

I'm trusting someone with better brains than me in the medical department will clarify that terminology ;-) In any event, this is GREAT news!! I've lost four friends/relatives to cancer in the past two years. Any news like this becomes like a gift from God.

3 posted on 09/19/2002 8:33:25 AM PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: jla
Great news BUMP
4 posted on 09/19/2002 8:34:38 AM PDT by Happygal
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To: NYer
Wonderful article. This is encouraging news. But how do keep those white cells under control?
5 posted on 09/19/2002 8:42:27 AM PDT by stanz
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To: NYer
bump
6 posted on 09/19/2002 8:56:29 AM PDT by VOA
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To: stanz
They eventually die themselves and are assimilated.
7 posted on 09/19/2002 9:20:11 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck
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To: HiTech RedNeck
insert Borg joke here
8 posted on 09/19/2002 9:25:40 AM PDT by KantianBurke
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To: MrConfettiMan
Bump for info....
9 posted on 09/19/2002 10:04:10 AM PDT by Explorer89
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To: NYer
``A young boy we treated two years ago had two pounds of tumor and he's now disease free,''
wow. Bump

10 posted on 09/19/2002 10:07:39 AM PDT by WindMinstrel
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To: NYer
Rosenberg emphasized that immune cell therapy against cancer is still ``highly experimental'' and at least two years away from being ready for general cancer patients.

That's the maddening part! Take a terminal cancer patient with 6 torturous months of chemo left to live, and withhold this treatment because it's experimental? Do you think they'd care that it's experimental?

That's almost as bad as withholding medical cannabis from a terminal patient because they might get "hooked". whoops, there I go again.....
11 posted on 09/19/2002 10:20:10 AM PDT by Neckbone
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To: Darth Sidious
You're right in that this treatment does sound similar to leukemia, but only superficially. In all cancers, certain cells mutate and lose the ability to grow in a normal and controlled manner. Essentially, the genetic code of cancer cells is damaged so that the cells are unable to perform their normal function. Instead, they become invasive killers of healthy cells. Unlike the diseased white cells in leukemia, the white cells grown in the lab are healthy and are engineered to aggressively perform their normal function. The key seems to be that vastly more healthy white cells can be introduced into a person than a body typically would produce. To use a military analogy, it's kind of like using massively overwhelming force to defeat the bad guys.
12 posted on 09/19/2002 10:25:57 AM PDT by Wolfstar
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To: Neckbone
I wholeheartedly agree. Although the thalidimide catastrophe of the 1950's taught us to be cautious with new drugs, it is absolutely maddening that promising new treatments such as this take many years to even get to the point where terminal patients are offered a chance to try them. Terminal patients who agree to participate are the ideal experimental subjects.
13 posted on 09/19/2002 10:32:10 AM PDT by Wolfstar
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To: Wolfstar
Agreed. I can understand the hyperscrutiny of non-lifesaving drugs- dietary supplements, etc. But to have a technology proven to save lives, especially one whose worst side-effects are likely less gruesome than chemotherapy, and keep it bogged down in a beaurocratic mire for the "protection" of those who will succumb to the illness in the meanwhile is barbaric.
14 posted on 09/19/2002 10:44:55 AM PDT by Neckbone
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To: NYer
Wonderful news...let's keep it bumped, people!

sw

15 posted on 09/19/2002 1:01:47 PM PDT by spectre
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To: Explorer89
Thanks for the ping, Exp89.
16 posted on 09/19/2002 1:07:26 PM PDT by MrConfettiMan
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To: Darth Sidious
I am no doctor, but my son had leukemia....and yes, leukemia is an over abundance of white blood cells, but they are not mature white cells, they are rather very immature white cells, that shoot out of the bone marrow, and really have no function at all, other than prevent the bone marrow from producing what the body really needs....fully matured white blood cells....

A mature white cell, is indeed on the front line of defense in fighting disease...but millions of immature white cells in the bone marrow, and in the blood, serve no purpose at all, and actually prevent the mature white cells from doing their job...
17 posted on 09/19/2002 1:12:53 PM PDT by andysandmikesmom
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To: Neckbone
One of the problems of bureaucracy: It is hopelessly static. The logic of an FDA falls apart when you are talking about terminally ill patients.

I wonder how much further along cancer research would be if cancer patients were able to use their own cash (or insurance) more freely?

Sure, there are quack cures out there, but the medical community takes policing its own very seriously.

18 posted on 09/19/2002 1:13:48 PM PDT by hopespringseternal
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To: NYer
This is great. Ya know, many years from now, people will talk about the "hidious" and "archaic" things we did to patients who had cancer; they will talk about how we had this treatment called "chemotherapy" where doctors would inject poison into the patient and hope the cancer died before the patient.
19 posted on 09/19/2002 1:16:27 PM PDT by luckodeirish
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To: NYer
YEA! LORD GOD, HELP THEM bring it to market ASAP at reasonable prices!
20 posted on 09/19/2002 1:29:43 PM PDT by Quix
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