He shared the results on Sunday as part of an update on new adoptive
Riddell, who has studied how to empower the immune system to effectively treat human disease for more than 25 years, said that progress now being made, underscored by these latest results, is finally making immunotherapy «a pillar of cancer therapy.»
But, he cautioned, «Much like chemotherapy and radiotherapy, it’s not going to be a
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The trial is designed to test the safety of the latest iteration of an experimental immunotherapy in which a patient’s own T cells are reprogrammed to eliminate his or her cancer. The reprogramming involves genetically engineering the T cells with synthetic molecules called chimeric antigen receptors, or CARs, that enable them to target and destroy tumor cells bearing a particular target. Trial participants include patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia,
Because T cells can continue to multiply once infused into patients, the therapy does not have to be administered repeatedly, as is the case with chemotherapies that are eventually broken down by and eliminated from the body. And by introducing the CARs into two specific subsets of T cells — an approach pioneered at Fred Hutch — the researchers have achieved more potent and
In one arm of the study led by Riddell’s colleagues Drs. David Maloney and Cameron Turtle, 27 of 29 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia showed no trace of cancer in their bone marrow following their infusions. Nineteen of 30
The team has submitted a manuscript for journal publication describing their results with the first group of ALL patients.
T cells are white blood cells that can detect foreign or abnormal cells, including cancerous ones, and initiate a process that targets those abnormal cells for attack. But even when triggered, the natural immune response to a tumor is often neither strong nor persistent enough to overcome cancer cells. The T cells can become exhausted before all of the cancer is eliminated, and tumors can use a variety of techniques to evade them, including by usurping the normal checks and balances our immune system relies on to prevent overreactions. Engineering patients’ T cells with CARs is one method researchers are testing to give the immune system the upper hand against the disease.
Riddell and his colleagues are constantly refining their process. They recently revised their CAR
Meanwhile, scientists in Riddell’s lab and other labs at Fred Hutch are already developing the next generation of engineered T cells, which are expected to be safer and easier to design.
Hutch teams, as well as those at other centers, are also working to extend the successes seen so far in
The trial is funded by Juno Therapeutics, which was initially formed on technology from researchers at Fred Hutch, Memorial