Vaccine May Treat Lung Cancer
4/28/2008 web-based article Salynn Boyles WebMD.com An experimental vaccine that works by training the immune system to kill specific tumor cells is showing promise for the treatment of early lung cancer, researchers report. The immune-system-boosting vaccine targets a protein expressed in certain cancer cells, but not in normal cells, known as MAGE-A3. About 35% of non-small-cell lung cancers (NSCLC) have this protein, which is also present in some melanomas and head and neck cancers. In a trial of early-stage lung cancer patients whose tumors expressed MAGE-A3, treatment with the vaccine was shown to reduce the risk of relapse after surgery. Long-term follow-up results from the early trial of the immunotherapy were presented at the 1st European Lung Cancer conference in Geneva, Switzerland. "The principle behind this approach has potential for many different types of cancer," researcher Johan Vansteenkiste, MD, PhD, tells WebMD. "The principle is that you teach the patient's immune system to eliminate cancer cells that express certain proteins." MAGE-A3 Vaccine The vaccine therapy has not been compared head-to-head with chemotherapy, which is often given to surgically treated lung cancer patients to reduce their risk of relapse. But Vansteenkiste says the immunotherapy-treated patients in the phase II study had outcomes similar to those seen among chemotherapy-treated patients, with almost no side effects. "Many surgically treated lung cancer patients are not able to tolerate the side effects of chemotherapy, either because of their age or because of other health issues," he says. "This approach is a promising alternative." A total [...]