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Fractured Silhouette
March 28th, 2013, 09:34 PM
Gene therapy has rid three adult patients of acute leukemia. The patients have been cancer-free for 5 months to 2 years, according to a study published last week (March 20) in Science Translational Medicine. Two other patients received the therapy, but one died for reasons believed to be unrelated, and the second died after relapsing.

“We had hoped, but couldn’t have predicted that the response would be so profound and rapid,” Renier Brentjens, lead author of the paper and an oncologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, told The New York Times.

The patients all had B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and had relapsed following chemotherapy. The outlook for patients in this category is typically bleak.

The researchers filtered the patients’ blood for T-cells and engineered them with a virus carrying genetic material that would make them recognize CD19, a protein expressed on the surfaces of B-cells. When put back into the patients, the T-cells were meant to attack the B-cells, whether cancerous or normal. The patients experienced unpleasant and dangerous immune reactions, but four of them, including the one that eventually died of an unrelated blood clot, went into remission.

The four patients who went into remission also received bone marrow transplants following the therapy, although it is unclear whether the transplants contributed to their recovery.

This is the first time T-cell therapy has been used successfully to treat adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Another treatment based on training T cells to attack cancerous cells is being developed at the University of Pennsylvania and is being used to treat childhood leukemia and chronic leukemia in adults.

The Sloan-Kettering approach for treating B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia will be tested in a second trial of 50 patients, New Scientist reported. The same idea could also be used to treat other cancers.

“Although it's early days for these trials, the approach of modifying a patient's T-cells to attack their cancer is looking increasingly like one that will, in time, have a place alongside more traditional treatments," Paul Moss, a cancer researcher at the University of Birmingham, told New Scientist.

http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/34857/title/Immune-System-Kills-Cancer/

Medical Miracles everywhere! Soon we'll be at a point were we cure all deadly diseases in developed country then the viruses will evolve and kill us all. Yay!

Foamy
March 29th, 2013, 05:25 PM
Soon we won't have to deal with these viruses! HIV is being cured, cancer is starting to be curable, soon there won't be any more of these diseases!

(At least until the zombie apocalypse happens from evolved viruses :P)

NTTHRASH
April 5th, 2013, 09:51 PM
Soon we won't have to deal with these viruses! HIV is being cured, cancer is starting to be curable, soon there won't be any more of these diseases!

(At least until the zombie apocalypse happens from evolved viruses :P)

Slight bump, but cancer isn't that hard to stop. In fact, as soon as the big, intelligent scientists figure out that you can just inject cytokines into the cancerous are, there will no longer be an issue...

DerBear
April 6th, 2013, 03:07 PM
I think we have to watch how medicine is affecting our bodies. I was watching the news the other week and its saying our bodies and the viruses is overcoming the effect life saving antibiotics give when fighting a disease allowing the disease to still remain.

Its quite worrying. Although this is defiantly good news. Hopefully we'll see a big development and we can start truly kicking ass when it comes to fighting diseases like HIV and Cancer.

Cicero
April 7th, 2013, 03:12 AM
I wouldn't get over excited yet.

Ryhanna
April 7th, 2013, 03:31 AM
This is a great development, though! It's a step in the right direction, and that's really all that we can ask for right now.