Guest guest Posted June 6, 2010 Report Share Posted June 6, 2010 BlankJune 5, 2010 Scientists Cite Advances on Two Kinds of Cancer By ANDREW POLLACK CHICAGO — Using two opposite strategies, one focused and one broad, scientists say they have made progress in taming two of the most intractable types of cancer. The focused approach shrank tumors significantly in a majority of patients with advanced lung cancer marked by a specific genetic abnormality. Even though the clinical trial was small (just 82 people, with no control group), the results were considered so striking for such sick patients that the study will be featured Sunday at the main session of the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology here. “This is a phenomenal example of finding the right patient and the right drug very early on,” said Dr. Pasi A. Janne of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, who was involved in the trial. The broader strategy uses a drug that could potentially become a universal treatment for all types of cancer. It works by releasing a brake on the body’s immune system, letting the immune system attack the cancer more vigorously. In a study of patients who had advanced melanoma, those who got an experimental drug lived a median of about 10 months, compared with 6.4 months for those in a control group. After two years, about 23 percent of those who got the drug were alive, compared with 14 percent in the control group. Lung cancer and melanoma are among the hardest cancers to treat. So the studies are being viewed as significant advances, though far from cures. Dr. J. O’Day of the Angeles Clinic and Research Institute in Santa , Calif., a lead investigator in the melanoma trial, called the result “historic,” and added, “This is the first randomized placebo-controlled trial ever to show a survival benefit in Stage 4 melanoma.” Bristol-Myers Squibb, which sponsored the trial, is planning to apply for regulatory approval to sell the drug, ipilimumab. Full story http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/06/health/research/06cancer.html?hpw= & pagewanted=\ print or http://nyti.ms/bJwKCe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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