Download Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
4/28/2016
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma patients | Department of Medicine | University of Washington
Quick Links
(https
ABOUT
PEOPLE
NEWS & EVENTS
EDUCATION
RESEARCH
PATIENT CARE
(https
FOR FACULTY
(https
round
Department of Medicine
(https
School of Medicine
(/)
(https
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma patients
techn
deskt
April 19, 2016
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma
patients
(https
Helpf
RESEARCH
My U
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare, aggressive type of skin
(http
cancer. It is less common than melanoma, but patients are
UW
three times more likely to die from it. (http
UW
Dr. Paul Nghiem, head of the Division of Dermatology
(http
(/division/dermatology), is leading a clinical trial of an
immunotherapy drug, pembrolizumab, where just over half
Facu
of patients with advanced cancers saw their tumor shrink or
(http
disappear after receiving the immune-boosting drug. Paul Nghiem looks at a sample of Merkel cell
Pembrolizumab acts by removing the “brakes” present on
Service.
jobs
carcinoma. Photo courtesy Fred Hutch News
med
Staf
tumor-speci䕰c immune cells called T cells, thereby allowing
https://medicine.uw.edu/news/immunotherapy­hope­merkel­cell­carcinoma­patients
1/4
4/28/2016
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma patients | Department of Medicine | University of Washington
tumor-speci䕰c immune cells called T cells, thereby allowing
(http
the T cells to kill the cancer cells.
“We believe that the immune system is likely ‘seeing’ different targets in the virus-positive and
virus-negative patients,” Nghiem said. Nghiem explained that virus-positive tumors produce the viral proteins needed for the tumors to grow.
These viral proteins may be readily seen by the immune system. In contrast, virus-negative MCC has
extremely high numbers of mutations caused by sunlight. These mutations can change the normal cellular
proteins so they no longer appear as “self” and the immune system can then see and attack these tumors.
The study was conducted at eight sites nationwide through the Fred Hutch-based Cancer Immunotherapy
Trials Network (http://citninfo.org/), led by Dr. Mac Cheever in the Division of Medical Oncology
(/division/oncology-medical). “It’s quite remarkable that one agent that unleashes T cells that are already in the body can have
such a profound effect in many of the patients,” Cheever said. The results of the immunotherapy treatment also last longer on average than chemotherapy treatment. The
study is still ongoing, but the vast majority (86 percent) who responded to pembrolizumab are still
experiencing excellent disease control more than six months after starting therapy, according to Nghiem. Pembrolizumab is also tolerated better than chemotherapy, with few to no side e橔‾ects. "It's remarkable how
well-tolerated it is in most of the patients," said Dr. Shailender Bhatia, who is the Seattle site leader for the
clinical trial. Nghiem says there are currently no FDA-approved drugs for the treatment of Merkel cell carcinoma, but they
are expanding the trial to recruit additional patients and hope that these data will contribute to meaningful
new therapeutic options becoming available for these patients. The results of the study are published in this week's New England Journal of Medicine (http://bit.ly/1qCV7OQ). LATEST NEWS
2016 faculty promotions (/news/2016-faculty-promotions)
5 days ago
Increasing and sustaining a diverse faculty (/news/increasing-and-sustaining-diverse-faculty)
1 week ago
https://medicine.uw.edu/news/immunotherapy­hope­merkel­cell­carcinoma­patients
2/4
4/28/2016
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma patients | Department of Medicine | University of Washington
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma patients (/news/immunotherapy-hope-merkel-cellcarcinoma-patients)
1 week ago
Michael Ryan to receive UW Alumni Service Award (/news/michael-ryan-receive-uw-alumni-serviceaward)
1 week ago
More
BROWSE CATEGORIES
Browse news by category
- Any Browse by division
- Any -
(http://www.washington.edu/boundless/be-boundless/)
https://medicine.uw.edu/news/immunotherapy­hope­merkel­cell­carcinoma­patients
3/4
4/28/2016
Immunotherapy: Hope for Merkel cell carcinoma patients | Department of Medicine | University of Washington
(http://www.washington.edu/boundless/be-boundless/)
Accessibility / Contact Us / Jobs / Campus Safety / My UW / Rules Docket / Privacy / Terms
© 2015-2016 University of Washington | Seattle, WA
Login (https://medicine.uw.edu/Shibboleth.sso/Login?target=https%3A%2F%2Fmedicine.uw.edu%2F%3Fq%3Dshib_login%2Fnode%2F371)
https://medicine.uw.edu/news/immunotherapy­hope­merkel­cell­carcinoma­patients
4/4