Reader\'s Digest Australia & New Zealand - June 2018

(Steven Felgate) #1
June• 2018 | 39

READER’S DIGEST


August 2017 to ight ac
lympho blastic leukemi
children and young ad
In a clinical trial, 83
cent of those receiving
T-cell therapy experie
remission within three months.
It’s also being used to treat certain
non-Hodgkins lymphoma patients.
Several other immunotherapy
drugs are currently being used
against cancer, sometimes with dra-
matic results. But most immuno-
therapies only work for a small
percentage of people. Usually, a
biopsy of the tumour is required to
ind out who’s a good candidate for
which therapy. But now, a new blood
test, called a liquid biopsy, is being
studied to determine whether, by
looking for DNA markers in an indi-
vidual’s blood, they can quickly and
easily determine which immuno-
therapy will help which patients.
Liquid biopsies might also be the
future of early detection of cancer,
according to an August 2017 paper
in Science Translational Medicine,
which reported their use to detect
genetic changes linked to early-stage
colorectal, breast, lung and ovarian
cancer, and may help detect cancer
recurrence.
One very diferent type of immu-
notherapy is a vaccine for lung cancer
called CIMAvax. It has signiicantly
increased survival times in patients
in Cuba, where it was developed,
and is now being tested in clinical


ls in the US. What makes
Avax unique is that unlike
st immunotherapies, which
only efective against very
cific cancer sub-types,
Avax suppresses a ‘growth
factor’ called EGF in the patient’s
body, and numerous diferent types
of cancers require EGF in order to
proliferate.
“he possibility is that this vaccine
would be useful in a large number
of cancers,” says Dr Kelvin Lee, pro-
fessor and chair of the immunolog y
department at Roswell Park Can-
cer Center. Among those are breast,
prostate, pancreatic, colon, and head
and neck cancers.

Bowel Cancer
Bowel cancer is the third most
common cancer in Australia and
second highest cause of cancer
death in New Zealand.
THE GOOD NEWS
Many more people are surviving
today.
HOW IT HAPPENED
More widespread and accurate
screening allows doctors to catch
it early.

Australia and New Zealand have
some of the highest rates of bowel
cancer in the world, but over the
last ten years, earlier detection has
resulted in a 20 per cent fall in the
overall mortality rate.

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