A new glioblastoma study is providing a glimmer of hope for those battling the aggressive and fast-growing brain tumor, as a novel treatment helped dramatically shrink the tumor in patients.
A Phase 1 clinical trial out of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston recently used a new cell therapy in patients with recurring glioblastoma.
Just days after a single treatment, the tumors dramatically reduced in size, according to the Mass General Cancer Center researchers. One patient even saw near-complete tumor regression.
“These results are exciting, but they are also just the beginning — they tell us that we are on the right track in pursuing a therapy that has the potential to change the outlook for this intractable disease,” said Marcela Maus, director of the Cellular Immunotherapy Program at Mass General Cancer Center.
“We haven’t cured patients yet, but that is our audacious goal,” Maus added.
MRI scans for the three patients with recurrent glioblastoma, conducted before and after the treatment, showed major shrinkage in the tumor size.
The trial tested a new type of CAR-T cell therapy, which arms the body’s own cells to fight the cancer. A patient’s cells are extracted, modified to produce proteins on their surface called chimeric antigen receptors, and then injected back into the body to target the tumor directly.
In the trial, a 57-year-old woman was treated with CAR-TEAM cells. An MRI five days after a single infusion of CAR-TEAM cells showed near-complete tumor regression.
Also, a 72-year-old man was treated with a single infusion of CAR-TEAM cells. Two days after receiving CAR-TEAM cells, an MRI showed a decrease in the tumor’s size by 18.5%. By day 69, the tumor had decreased by 60.7%, and the response was sustained for more than 6 months.
Despite the remarkable responses among the first three patients, the tumors eventually recurred within 6 months in two of the study’s patients — so the researchers are now working to find…
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