Monday, September 04, 2006

Gene-therapy result promising -- at last

WASHINGTON - A team of researchers from the National Cancer Institute on Thursday reported that they had successfully treated two cancer patients using gene therapy, the introduction of genes into the human body for medical purposes.


Two men, both with the rapidly growing skin cancer melanoma, were given immune system cells taken from their own blood and engineered to attack their tumors. They are alive, with no evidence of cancer, 18 months later. Fifteen other patients who got the same treatment died.


The report, published online by the journal Science, is the latest result of a three-decade effort by surgeon Steven Rosenberg to find ways to manipulate the human immune system to fight cancer.


Four years ago, Rosenberg and his colleagues treated a group of melanoma patients with naturally occurring anti-cancer cells extracted from their tumors, and some of those patients also have had long-term disappearance of their cancers. The new report, however, is believed to be the first time that genetically engineered immune system cells -- specifically, T lymphocytes -- have produced the same effect.

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