A deadly form of childhood cancer, neuroblastoma, has been treated successfully by pediatric oncologists using immunotherapy where biologic agents stimulate the body's immune system.
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“We expect these findings will change clinical practice, setting a new gold standard of treatment for this often-deadly disease,” said John M. Maris, M.D., a co-author of the study and director of the Center for Childhood Cancer Research at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Maris is the chair of the neuroblastoma committee of the Children’s Oncology Group (COG), the cooperative multicenter research organization that sponsored the study.The study appears in the Sept. 30 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, along with a separate COG study on intermediate-risk neuroblastoma.
The corresponding author of the immunotherapy study is Alice L. Yu, M.D., Ph.D., of the University of California, San Diego.
Neuroblastoma, a cancer of the peripheral nervous system, usually appears as a solid tumor in the chest or abdomen. It accounts for 7 percent of all childhood cancers, but because it frequently occurs in an aggressive form, it causes 15 percent of all childhood cancer deaths. While low-risk forms of neuroblastoma may spontaneously disappear, in high-risk forms, the cancer tends to return after initial treatment, usually with lethal results.
In the current study, researchers assigned 226 high-risk patients at multiple cancer centers to receive either the standard therapy (the chemotherapy drug isotretinoin) or immunotherapy—three biological agents in combination with isotretinoin. Immunotherapy consisted of the monoclonal antibody ch14.18, plus two cytokines: granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and interleukin-2. Monoclonal antibodies are molecular “guided missiles” engineered to kill cancer cells by targeting a substance appearing on those cells. Cytokines are naturally occurring signaling proteins that regulate immune responses.
Within two years of follow-up, approximately 54 percent of the neuroblastoma patients receiving standard treatment suffered a disease relapse, which is almost uniformly fatal. In contrast, over the same time period, only 34 percent of patients receiving the experimental immunotherapy regimen had their disease return, resulting in a much higher cure rate. The immunotherapy group of patients did experience pain and other toxic side effects at a higher rate than the standard treatment group. Nonetheless, the evidence of clear benefits from immunotherapy allowed the researchers to halt the trial earlier than expected.
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