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| NCI Researchers Confirm the Effectiveness
of Immunotherapy Approach to Treating Melanoma
A team of researchers, led by Steven A. Rosenberg,
M.D., at the National Cancer Institute, part of the
National Institutes of Health, have found that patients
with advanced melanoma who had not responded to previous
therapies experienced a significant reduction in the
size of their cancers as a result of receiving a new
immunotherapy. This immunotherapy consisted of a combination
of chemotherapy and reintroduction of their own (autologous)
activated lymphocytes. Autologous lymphocytes are white
blood cells that have been removed from the patient,
activated or re-educated to attack the tumor, then reintroduced
into the patient. The promise of this therapy is that
a patient's own immune system can be used to effectively
treat existing tumors. Results are reported in the April
2005 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology.*
"These results represent confirmation of our original
findings that were published in Science in
2002," said Rosenberg. The findings published in 2002** were
in an initial patient population of 13 and these new
findings represent almost a three-fold increase in patient
numbers.
Thirty-five patients with melanoma that had progressed
throughout the body were chosen for the study. The patients
had not responded successfully when treated with standard
therapies and had developed growing tumors. Blood was
drawn from the patients, and then lymphocytes, a type
of white blood cell in the blood that can attack tumors,
were separated from other parts of the blood. Next,
patients were treated for two days with the chemotherapy
agent cyclophosphamide followed by five days of fludarabine.
The chemotherapy drugs were used to reduce the number
of lymphocytes circulating in the blood, therefore reducing
competition for the newly activated tumor-fighting lymphocytes
being reintroduced in to the blood stream.
After the seven days of chemotherapy, the patients
received their own lymphocytes that had been renewed
with increased tumor-fighting capacity. They also received
a high dose of Interleukin-2 (IL-2), a protein made
by the body that makes the tumor-fighting cells mature
and multiply.
Of the 35 patients in this study, 18 (51 percent) experienced
an improvement in the amount of tumor present at diverse
sites in the body: lung, liver, lymph nodes, brain and
skin. Eight other patients demonstrated a mixed or minor
response. Of the 18 patients showing improvement, 15
had a partial response that lasted from two months to
more than two years. It is noteworthy that there were
three (9 percent) patients who continued to experience
complete disappearance of tumors. This result is particularly
significant because these patients had not responded
to standard treatments or chemotherapies used in treating
patients with melanoma.
Thirteen patients relapsed after positive response
to therapy and developed tumors at pre-existing or new
sites within the body. There were no treatment-related
deaths in this study. The loss of white blood cells,
which fight infections, led to the development of infections
in seven patients. Toxicities related to the chemotherapy
and administration of a high dose of IL-2 were easily
managed.
The results of this study prove that a combination
of chemotherapy and infusion of autologous, stimulated,
white blood cells can have an impact on metastatic melanoma
tumors in patients who do not respond to other therapies. "The
results of this study are encouraging, and suggest that
some patients with melanoma who do not respond to conventional
treatments may get a durable benefit from treatments
based on using their own immune cells" said Mark Dudley,
Ph.D., coauthor of the study.
For more information about cancer, visit the NCI Web site
at http://www.cancer.gov or
call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4 CANCER
(1-800-422-6237).
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*Dudley ME, Wunderlich JR, Yang JC, Sherry
RM, Topalian SL, Restifo NP, Royal RE, Kammula U, White DE,
Mavroukakis SA, Rogers LJ, Gracia GJ, Jones SA, Mangiameli DP,
Pelletier MM, Gea-Banacloche J, Robinson MR, Berman DM, Filie
AC, Abati A, Rosenberg SA. Adoptive cell transfer therapy following
non-myeloablative but lymphodepleting chemotherapy for the treatment
of patients with refractory metastic melanoma. Journal of
Clinical Oncology April 1, 2005; 23(10).
**Dudley ME, Wunderlich JR, Robbins PF,
Yang JC, Hwu P, Schwartzentruber DJ, Topalian SL, Sherry R,
Restifo NP, Hubicki AM, Robinson MR, Raffeld M, Duray P, Seipp
CA, Rogers-Freezer L, Morton KE, Mavroukakis SA, White DE,
Rosenberg SA. Cancer regression and autoimmunity in patients
after clonal repopulation with antitumor lymphocytes. Science 2002;
298:850-854.
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