More advanced therapies are being aimed at cancer

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A lab officer cuts a DNA fragment under UV light from an agarose gel for DNA sequencing as part of research to determine genetic mutation in a blood cancer patient, in Singapore, which prides itself as an advanced medical treatment and research hub. New research shows a sharp escalation in the weapons race against cancer, with several high-tech approaches long dreamed of but not possible or successful until now. (AP file photo)
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Dozens of similar “smart bomb” drugs are in development. On Monday, Pfizer Inc. plans to report on one it is testing for certain types of lymphoma and leukemia. Only one such drug is on the market now – Adcetris, sold by Seattle Genetics Inc. for some less common types of lymphoma.

The other big news at the conference involved a very different approach: using the immune system to fight cancer. For more than a century, doctors have been trying to harness its power, but tumor cells have cloaking mechanisms that have kept the immune system from recognizing them as “enemy” and going on the attack.

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. has developed two drugs – one aimed at cancer cells and the other at key soldier cells of the immune system – to remove one of these invisibility cloaks. Two studies involving nearly 500 people found some tumor shrinkage in up to one-quarter of patients with lung and kidney cancers as well as the deadly skin cancer, melanoma. The treatments had less impact against colon and prostate cancer.

These are only early results – not survival comparisons or definitive tests, doctors warn. More testing is needed to even establish safety. In one study, three patients died of a lung inflammation considered due to the treatment.

However, ordinary chemotherapy can prove fatal, too, said one study leader, Dr. Julie Brahmer of Johns Hopkins University.

“There were a few patients who had a complete remission” from the immune system treatments and most patients suffered few side effects, she said. “It’s great to see patients feeling well. They don’t have hair loss, they don’t have a drop in blood counts and are not as prone to infections.”

Dr. Roy Herbst, medical oncology chief at Yale Cancer Center in New Haven, Conn., was hopeful.

“I haven’t seen anything this good” for many years for treating lung cancer, he said. “I’d be very surprised if there wasn’t some benefit” on survival, said Herbst, who has consulted for the drug’s maker.

Other doctors, including Pfizer’s cancer drug development chief, Dr. Mace Rothenberg, noted progress on new diagnostic tests to predict which drugs will work for which patients. Cost, time and difficulty have kept many of them from being practical in everyday settings for cancer patients, but “a lot of these barriers are falling,” Rothenberg said.

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