Immune System-Based Therapy Produces Lasting Remissions in Melanoma Patients, Study Reports
A drug that unleashes the immune system to attack cancer can produce lasting remissions and hold the disease in check — for more than 2 years, in some cases — in many patients with advanced melanoma, according to a new study by researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Yale University, and allied institutions.
The study, published online 3 March, by the Journal of Clinical Oncology, provides the longest-term look so far at how melanoma patients have fared since receiving the drug, nivolumab, in a Phase I clinical trial. The results indicate that the benefits of nivolumab not only occur quickly but can persist, even in some cases where use of the drug is discontinued.
The clinical trial involved 107 patients with advanced melanoma that no longer responded to other treatments. They received nivolumab intravenously every other week for up to 96 weeks. After one year, 62% of the patients were alive. After 2 years, 43% were alive.
“These are striking results for patients with metastatic melanoma,” said the study’s senior author F. Stephen Hodi, MD, director of the Melanoma Treatment Center at Dana-Farber. “This study provides the first demonstration of the long-term benefits this treatment approach can produce.”
Nivolumab is one of a new generation of drugs that essentially releases the brakes on an immune system attack on cancer. The drug blocks PD-1, a protein on immune system T cells that restrains them from leading a charge on tumor cells. By interfering with PD-1, nivolumab allows the attack to proceed.
The side effects of the treatment were consistent with those observed in previous studies of the drug. The most common adverse experiences were fatigue, rash, and diarrhea, most of which occurred in the first 6 months of therapy. Prolonged exposure to the drug didn’t produce cumulative negative effects, the investigators report.
One of the most noteworthy findings of the study is that, in many patients, tumours either remained the same size or continued to recede even after the treatment period was over. “This suggests that blockade PD-1 may reset the equilibrium between the immune system and the tumour, keeping tumour growth in check,” remarked Hodi, who is also the director of the Center for Immuno-Oncology at Dana-Farber.
Another intriguing discovery is that overall survival times for patients in the trial were considerably longer than the periods in which the disease did not worsen. In other words, even in patients who developed small new melanoma growths after treatment, the disease often remained under control. That is far different from the usual sequence of events, in which the appearance of new growths often heralds a full-scale return of the disease, Hodi said.
The effectiveness of nivolumab in these patients suggests that combining the drug with other immune system-based therapies may prove even more potent, the authors indicate. Clinical trials are already under way to assess such a combined approach.
Funding for the study was provided by Bristol-Myers Squibb.
Related News
-
News CPHI Podcast Series: The power of proteins in antibody drug development
In the latest episode of the CPHI Podcast Series, Lucy Chard is joined by Thomas Cornell from Abzena to discuss protein engineering for drug design and development. -
News Amgen sues Samsung biologics unit over biosimilar for bone disease
Samsung Bioepis, the biologics unit of Samsung, has been issued a lawsuit brought forth by Amgen over proposed biosimilars of Amgen’s bone drugs Prolia and Xgeva. -
News CPHI Podcast Series: Why we need to consider women in clinical trials
The latest episode of the CPHI Podcast Series with Lucy Chard covers women's health, specifically women's representation in clinical trials, the associated bias, and the impacts on health for this population. -
News US FDA does not approve MDMA therapy for PTSD, requests more data
The MDMA-based therapeutic developed by Lykos Therapeutics, a California-based Public Benefit Corporation (PBC), has been reviewed and unapproved by the US FDA. The regulator has requested additional phase III trial data for further safety and efficacy... -
News Novartis and Viatris latest facing lawsuit over HeLa cell misuse
Global pharmaceutical companies Novartis and Viatris are the latest hit with a lawsuit claim pertaining to alleged misuse of the ‘HeLa’ cell line from the estate of woman whose cancerous tissue cells were taken without consent. -
News Sanofi invests billions into Frankfurt insulin production site
French pharmaceutical company Sanofi have announced an investment of EUR1.3 billion at their existing BioCampus site in Frankfurt am Main for the expansion of insulin production. -
News Novel oral Type 1 diabetes drug gains US FDA IND designation
A University of Alabama at Birmingham startup has gained FDA clearance for Investigational New Drug clinical trials for an oral Type 1 diabetes drug, a milestone for diabetes treatment. -
News A Day in the Life of a Vice President in R&D & Engineering
In the Day in the Life of Series, we've already had the chance to get to know a range of people in various roles in the pharma industry. In the latest interview we get a glimpse into the R&D side of things from Jennifer Sorrells, Vice Presiden...
Position your company at the heart of the global Pharma industry with a CPHI Online membership
-
Your products and solutions visible to thousands of visitors within the largest Pharma marketplace
-
Generate high-quality, engaged leads for your business, all year round
-
Promote your business as the industry’s thought-leader by hosting your reports, brochures and videos within your profile
-
Your company’s profile boosted at all participating CPHI events
-
An easy-to-use platform with a detailed dashboard showing your leads and performance