Researchers at
the National Cancer Institute (NCI) have found an experimental therapy
may be useful in treating a rare cancer of the blood known as hairy cell
leukemia (HCL). The results of a recent study, published in the journal
Blood (Vol. 94, No. 10), showed the treatment led to a dramatic
improvement in the condition of four patients who were tested and was able
to kill nearly all of their cancerous cells.
HCL is a rarely seen cancer of cells known as B lymphocytes, which circulate
in the blood and are part of the body’s immune system. It is diagnosed
in only 500 to 600 patients every year in the US, accounting for about
2 percent of leukemia cases. Several therapies are available for the treatment
of patients with HCL. While current treatments can cause the cancer to
go into remission, they cannot cure it because a small percentage of cancer
cells are left behind after treatment. In addition, the treatments stop
working after a period of time in about 10 to 20 percent of patients.
How The Treatment Works
The new experimental therapy involves the injection of an immunotoxin
designed to destroy the cancerous cells. This immunotoxin, known as LMB-2,
is made by using recombinant DNA technology to attach part of an antibody
molecule (designed to recognize a substance called CD25) to the toxin produced
by a bacteria called Pseudomonas.
Antibodies made in our bodies can recognize microbes and some cancer
cells as "foreign," or "non-self." Once an antibody attaches to a microbe,
the microbe is usually destroyed by immune system cells. But this system
is less effective in killing cancer cells. LMB-2 is much more destructive
to cancer cells because it has a deadly toxin attached to it. When the
immunotoxin is injected into the body, its antibody position recognizes
CD25 molecules of cancerous cells. The toxin then enters and destroys those
cells.
"This treatment may be an effective new therapy for patients with this
type of cancer," concluded the researchers. All four patients studied showed
what the researchers described as "major responses." None of them were
responsive to the standard therapies but they all responded to the immunotoxin
after only one round of treatment. One of the four patients was treated
twice with the immunotoxin and went into complete remission (meaning no
cancerous cells were thought to be remaining). This patient had not relapsed
after 11 months. The three other patients showed a dramatic 98 percent
to 99.8 percent reduction in the number of cancerous cells in their bloodstreams.
"We are very excited by these results and optimistic that our approach
will be useful for treating other types of cancer. The next step involves
further research in more patients, which should begin next year," said
lead study author Ira Pastan, MD, chief of the laboratory of molecular
biology in the division of basic sciences at the National Cancer Institute.
Therapy Could Apply to Any Type of Cancer
The potential use for this type of therapy is not limited to HCL. Dr.
Pastan predicts future research will show immunotoxins are potentially
useful for any type of cancer as long as the cancer cells recognized by
the immunotoxin are in some way different from normal, non-cancerous cells.
"Clinical trials using immunotoxins in patients with other types of
cancer such as breast cancer, ovarian cancer, colorectal cancer, and melanoma
are already underway," noted the author of a recent review on the subject,
Louis M. Weiner, MD, of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia. But
Dr. Weiner cautioned that "some studies have shown a toxic effect which
is thought to arise from the uptake of the toxins by normal cells and further
research needs to be performed."
Ralph Vogler, MD, scientific program director for the American Cancer
Society (ACS) said there have been several different studies over the years
on the ability of antibodies to target specific tissues. "The major problem
is the specificity of the antibody. If the antibody is made against
a protein that is unique for the cancer cell, then it can be very effective
with no toxicity. Overall, this is a promising approach."
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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