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Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Addition of immunotherapy boosts pediatric cancer survival
Children with neuroblastoma see improved outcome when immunotherapy is added to standard therapy.
Administering a new form of immunotherapy to children with neuroblastoma, a nervous system cancer, increased the percentage of those who were alive and free of disease progression after two years. The percentage rose from 46 percent for children receiving a standard therapy to 66 percent for children receiving immunotherapy plus standard therapy, according to the study in the Sept. 30, 2010, New England Journal of Medicine. The randomized phase III clinical trial was coordinated by the Children’s Oncology Group (COG), a national consortium of researchers supported by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the NIH.
Neuroblastoma is a cancer of the peripheral nervous system (found outside of the brain and spinal cord), and is responsible for 12 percent of all deaths due to cancer in children under 15 years of age. It is the most common non-brain solid tumor in children. Nearly 50 percent of patients with neuroblastoma have a high-risk form of the disease and have poor long-term survival despite very intensive treatment.
The previously established standard treatment for neuroblastoma uses high doses of chemotherapy to destroy as many cancer cells as possible. But this form of chemotherapy (myleoablative therapy) also destroys some normal blood-forming cells, so it is followed by giving back previously collected blood-forming cells to restore immune system function and blood cell formation. Patients who respond to this therapy are then given the drug isotretinoin to further treat any remaining cancer cells. Isotretinoin is a derivative of vitamin A and is also used to treat severe acne. Moreover, it has been found to prevent the proliferation of neuroblastoma cells. More than half of the patients with high-risk neuroblastoma treated in this manner succumb to the disease. Researchers are searching for a more effective approach to treatment.
A newer approach to cancer treatment is immunotherapy, which in this instance uses an antibody called ch14.18 to target a substance on the surface of tumor cells called GD2. The GD2 is expressed by cancers such as neuroblastoma but is also present on some normal nerve cells. Early-phase studies demonstrated the safety and activity of ch14.18 when it was given with other drugs that boost the immune system. Those drugs include a factor which stimulates white blood cell growth and a hormone that increases the number and activity of certain types of immune cells.
In this study, 226 children with high-risk neuroblastoma who had responded to myeloablative therapy were randomly assigned to receive standard therapy (isotretinoin), or isotretinoin, ch14.18, and the immune system boosting drugs. The median time these patients were followed in the study was approximately two years. Although the original plan had been to compare outcomes after three years, the study stopped early because of the strongly positive results, allowing those on standard therapy to switch to ch14.18 immunotherapy if they wished.
"The phase III trial results establish ch14.18 immunotherapy as a new standard treatment for children with high-risk neuroblastoma," said Alice Yu, M.D., Ph.D., University of California, San Diego and study chair of the clinical trial.
Toxicities, including pain, low blood pressure, capillary leak (leakage of blood from capillaries in the circulatory system to the surrounding tissue), and hypersensitivity reactions, were encountered with the immunotherapy treatment at a significantly greater rate than compared to those who just received the standard therapy. However, side effects in the immunotherapy group were temporary and primarily resolved when treatment was stopped.
Because there was no pharmaceutical company to make ch14.18 when the phase III trial started, NCI manufactured the agent and provided it to COG for the clinical trial. NCI continues to manufacture ch14.18 and to make it available to children with high-risk neuroblastoma through ongoing Children's Oncology Group clinical trials. "These manufacturing activities illustrate the institute's commitment to developing new treatments for patients with rare cancers for whom treatments are not likely to be developed by industry," said James H. Doroshow, M.D., director of NCI's Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis.
NCI has identified a pharmaceutical partner, United Therapeutics Corp., Silver Spring, Md., that will eventually take over responsibility for manufacturing ch14.18 and which will be responsible for obtaining U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval of ch14.18 for the treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma. The further development of ch14.18 by United Therapeutics is being done under a cooperative research and development agreement with NCI.
"Despite the remarkable success of the ch14.18 phase III trial, there is still much work that needs to be done. We need to identify more effective and less toxic ways to use ch14.18 as well as to develop novel treatments to help children not cured with currently available therapies," said Malcolm Smith, M.D., Ph.D., associate branch chief, Pediatrics, Clinical Investigations Branch, NCI.
NCI leads the National Cancer Program and the NIH effort to dramatically reduce the burden of cancer and improve the lives of cancer patients and their families, through research into prevention and cancer biology, the development of new interventions, and the training and mentoring of new researchers. For more information about cancer, please visit the NCI Web site at http://www.cancer.gov or call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
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Reference
Yu AL, Gilman AL, et al. Anti-GD2 Antibody with GM-CSF, IL2 and Isotretinoin for Neuroblastoma: A Children's Oncology Group (COG) Phase III Study. Sept. 30, 2010. NEJM. Vol. 363, No. 14.