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Rush
is actively seeking study participants. For
more information, please call Kathy Culiner,
research nurse, at 312-942-6757.
Novel
Lung Cancer Vaccine shows promise in
fighting early-stage Lung Cancer
Newswise — An experimental vaccine that
triggers the patient’s immune system to
identify and attack specific tumor cells is
showing new promise for the treatment of
early lung cancer.
Thoracic surgeons at Rush University Medical
Center are researching the vaccine called
MAGE-A3 Antigen-Specific Cancer
Immunotherapeutic, which is designed to kill
cancer cells without harming normal cells.
Rush is one of only five hospitals in
Illinois offering the vaccine.
The MAGRIT (MAGE-A3 as Adjuvant Non-Small
Cell LunG Cancer Immunotherapy) study is a
randomized, double-blind and placebo
controlled trial that will enroll patients
with MAGE A-3-positive, non-small-cell lung
cancers.
The experimental vaccine targets MAGE-A3, a
protein expressed in certain cancer cells
but not in normal cells.
Thirty-five percent of non-small-cell lung
cancers have this protein which also is
present in some melanomas and head and neck
cancers.
“The principle is that you can possibly
teach a patient’s immune system to eliminate
cancer cells that express certain proteins
such as the MAGE-A3 protein,” said Dr.
Anthony Kim, thoracic surgeon and principal
investigator of the study at Rush.
“In a trial of early-stage lung cancer
patients whose tumors expressed MAGE-A3,
preliminary results showed that the
vaccination reduced the risk of recurrence
and the need for repeat surgery.”
The vaccination may be a promising
alternative treatment solution for lung
cancer patients that may not be ideal
candidates for chemotherapy.
Many surgically treated lung cancer patients
are not able to tolerate the side effects of
chemotherapy.
Surgery is the standard treatment for
patients with early-stage lung cancer, but
approximately 50 percent of patients who
have surgery ultimately die of lung cancer.
“Adding the tumor vaccine to surgery has the
potential to boost the survival rate by 10
percent, which was the figure that was
observed in the initial phase of the MAGE-A3
trial,” said Kim.
“This is a potential alternative for
patients that otherwise would not undergo
chemotherapy treatment either because of
their tumor stage or other co-morbidities
such as their age or other medical
problems.”
A total of 182 patients with non-small-cell
lung cancers were included in the early
phase of the study sponsored by
GlaxoSmithKline, which is developing the
vaccine therapy.
All the patients had cancers expressing
MAGE-A3, the tumor-specific antigen. After
having surgery to remove the tumors, 122
patients were randomly assigned to treatment
with the MAGE-A3-targeting vaccine and 60
patients received placebo vaccines.
The preliminary research shows that the
treatment was well tolerated by patients and
the MAGE-A3-treated patients seemed less
likely to have recurrences and die from
their disease than the placebo-treated
patients.
Further studies need to be completed to test
the safety and efficacy of the vaccine.
Patients were given five injections every
three weeks at the beginning of treatment
and then eight injections every three months
later for a total of 27 months.
Earlier phases of the study indicate the
immunotherapy treatment was well tolerated
by patients.
Roughly 430 patients die of lung cancer
every day in the U.S. making it the
national’s number one cancer killer and the
second most common cancer.
An
estimated 215,000 new cases of lung cancer
will be diagnosed and 162,000 individuals
will die from the disease this year in the
United States.
About Rush University
Medical Center
Rush University Medical Center is an
academic medical center that encompasses the
more than 600 staffed-bed hospital
(including Rush Children’s Hospital), the
Johnston R. Bowman Health Center and Rush
University.
Rush University, with more than 1,270
students, is home to one of the first
medical schools in the Midwest, and one of
the nation’s top-ranked nursing colleges.
Rush University also offers graduate
programs in allied health and the basic
sciences.
Rush is noted for bringing together clinical
care and research to address major health
problems, including arthritis and orthopedic
disorders, cancer, heart disease, mental
illness, neurological disorders and diseases
associated with aging.
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