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CHICAGO (AP) -- Preliminary, early results
in 14 vaccinated survivors of advanced breast cancer suggest
researchers might be on the right path to trying to prevent
the cancer from returning.
They
have detected signs that the vaccine triggered an immune-system
response in all 14 that might potentially fight recurring
cancer cells, said co-researcher Dr. George Peoples Jr.
of Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
Peoples
prepared study results for presentation Wednesday at an
American College of Surgeons meeting in Chicago.
After
five major surgeries for a particularly aggressive form
of breast cancer, Patricia Thomas called the little pinprick
she received in a government study the simplest procedure
she's undergone.
That
pinprick above her knee was an experimental vaccine derived
from tiny bits of tumor protein that researchers hope will
keep the 70-year-old Arlington, Va., woman's cancer from
returning.
Dr.
Clifford Hudis, a breast cancer specialist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center, called the results promising and said they
bolster previous evidence from similar breast cancer vaccine
research. While it's unclear if the results will translate
into disease prevention, "it's a critical first step,"
Hudis said.
Vaccine
studies are a burgeoning area of cancer research. Unlike
traditional vaccines, which generally aim to prevent disease,
some experimental cancer vaccines are designed to treat
or cure existing disease.
The
women studied at Walter Reed all had received conventional
treatment for cancer that had spread to the lymph nodes.
They had no symptoms when they were vaccinated but likely
had lingering cancer cells and face a high risk of relapse.
Peoples
said if his study continues to show positive results, within
a few years the vaccine might be tried in healthy women
at high risk for breast cancer.
"This
is a field that deserves a lot of work" and the early
findings "suggest they're on the right track,"
said Dr. Harmon Eyre, the American Cancer Society's chief
medical officer.
Eyre
said that vaccines have already shown promise in preventing
cancers related to infections. The hepatitis B vaccine given
to U.S. newborns also prevents hepatitis-related liver cancer,
and an experimental vaccine against a virus linked to cervical
cancer also has had good results.
The
vaccine used in the Walter Reed study was safe and caused
no serious side effects. Cancer has recurred in two women,
but they had the weakest immune response to the vaccine,
Peoples said.
Cancer
also has returned in four of 20 women with advanced breast
cancer who were not vaccinated. The disease recurred much
more quickly in the unvaccinated group, after an average
of about five months, compared with about 10 months in the
vaccinated women.
In the
study, led by Walter Reed's Dr. Craig Shriver, vaccinated
women got shots monthly for six months. The women have been
followed an average of about 1 1/2 years.
Thomas,
diagnosed three years ago, said she initially was told she
had a less than 50 percent chance of surviving five years.
She said she realizes she may not live long enough to benefit
from the vaccine, but hopes the study will someday benefit
other women, including her two daughters and grandchildren,
who because of familial breast cancer face an increased
disease risk.
The
vaccine targets a growth-stimulating protein called HER2/neu
that appears on the surface of normal cells but in overabundant
quantities on cancer cells in about 30 percent of women
with breast cancer, Peoples said.
Cancer
cells often are able to grow and spread because the body
doesn't recognize them as foreign. But the researchers concocted
the vaccine from tiny bits of that protein that are the
most likely to trigger a disease-fighting immune response.
The
vaccine also contains an approved drug that helps boost
disease-fighting white blood cell counts.
Dr.
Mary Disis, director of the tumor vaccine group at the University
of Washington, has had similar results with an HER2 vaccine.
Disis said in some of her patients, the vaccine-triggered
immune response has lasted about five or six years. She's
investigating whether that immunity has translated into
less disease recurrence.
Copyright
2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
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