Immunotherapy cures late-stage breast cancer in world first: study

AFP  |  Paris 

A woman with an aggressive form of breast which defied and spread to other organs, was cured with an experimental treatment that triggered her immune system, researchers said today.

So-called "immunotherapy" has already been shown to work in some people with of the lung, cervix, blood cells (leukaemia), skin (melanoma) and bladder.

But an immune breakthrough for bowel, breast and ovary has remained elusive.

In the latest study, a team extracted immune cells called lymphocytes from the patient, tweaked them in the lab, then reinjected them.

The woman was 49 when she signed up for the clinical trial after several attempts at a cure through conventional treatments had failed, said the study published in the scientific journal Nature

The cancer had spread to various parts of her body, including the liver.

A person's is designed to kill invaders, including rogue, cancerous cells. But it can fail, often because it cannot recognise cancer cells containing the patient's own DNA.

trains a patient's own immune cells to recognise and fight cancer.

For the new study, researchers took lymphocytes from a in the woman's body and scanned them for specific types which reacted to mutant, cancerous cells.

These were reactivated or "switched on" in the lab and injected back, along with a so-called "immune checkpoint inhibitor" -- another type of that has shown success in other types of cancer.

This resulted in a "highly personalised" that yielded "complete regression," the researchers wrote.

In a comment also published by Nature Medicine, expert from for said the woman's response to the treatment was "unprecedented" for such advanced

This work showed "we are now at the cusp of a major revolution in finally realising the elusive goal of being able to target the plethora of mutations in cancer through immunotherapy," he wrote.

In a reaction via the in London, of The said the trial was "fascinating and exciting".

The work "provides a major 'proof-of-principle step forward, in showing how the power of the can be harnessed to attack even the most difficult-to-treat cancers," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, June 04 2018. 22:35 IST