[imagesource:mcmasteruniversity]
In what researchers have described as an “unprecedented” result, a new medicine that treats locally advanced rectal cancer has fully removed tumours in all 42 patients who participated in the Phase II study.
The drug, Jemperli (dostarlimab-gxly), had earlier shown great potential for curing mismatch repair deficient (dMMR) cancers, which make up 5-10% of colorectal cancers. Following the recent trial, the first 24 patients showed a “sustained complete clinical response” – in other words, no cancer remaining – after an average of three years.
“These findings demonstrate the potential of dostarlimab-gxly as a novel approach to treating locally advanced dMMR rectal cancer that leads to durable complete tumour regression without the need for life-altering treatment,” said Dr Andrea Cercek, researcher and oncologist at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
The drug has huge potential as a first-line treatment option and bypasses the need for chemotherapy and radiation.
While current cancer treatment is effective, it’s incredibly invasive and impacts negatively on the long-term quality of a cancer survivor’s life. Ultimately, a third of patients who undergo standard treatment will see their cancer metastasise and become terminal.
Patients with rectal cancer who undergo surgery often experience life-changing impacts on their health, including bowel, urinary and sexual dysfunction, as well as secondary cancers and infertility. This new treatment might just avoid all of that.
Dr Luis Diaz Jr said that after preliminary trial research showed how effective this drug was at targeting cancer, “We wanted to see if we could make a tumour with the MMR(d) mutation recede and eventually disappear using only immunotherapy to spare patients these life-altering consequences of standard treatment.”
Unlike chemotherapy, dostarlimab-gxly is an antibody that blocks the ‘programmed death receptor-1’ (PD-1) and once inside the body, binds to the PD-1 cells and then encourages them to target cancer cells.
Last year, the FDA approved the drug as a supplement to chemotherapy for endometrial cancer. GSK, the pharmaceutical company behind Jemperli, will now conduct research on additional types of colorectal tumours, aiming for similarly positive findings.
“These results bring us one step closer to understanding the potential of dostarlimab-gxly for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer.”
Back in October 2023, Johnson & Johnson also presented promising new research in lung, bladder and prostate cancers at the European Society for Medical Oncology Annual Meeting that also focussed on non-invasive treatments for these types of cancers.
The cure for cancer has been the holy grail for researchers for decades, but what once seemed like an out-of-reach goal may soon be within our grasp. Since the 90s, there has been a steady decline in cancer cases due to advances in modern medicine and increased awareness, yet cancer remains a leading cause of death globally.
Hopefully, with the introduction of advanced AI technologies in the medical field, we might one day be able to cure cancer without painful surgeries and debilitating chemotherapy.
[source:newatlas]
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