New frontier in cancer care: Turning blood into living drugs

SEATTLE (AP) — Ken Shefveland’s body was swollen with cancer,  treatment after treatment failing until doctors gambled on a radical  approach: They removed some of his immune cells, engineered them into cancer assassins and unleashed them into his bloodstream.

Immune therapy is the hottest trend in cancer care and this is its  next frontier — creating “living drugs” that grow inside the body into  an army that seeks and destroys tumors.

Looking in the mirror, Shefveland saw “the cancer was just melting  away.” A month later doctors at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research  Center couldn’t find any signs of lymphoma in the Vancouver, Washington,  man’s body.

“Today I find out I’m in full remission — how wonderful is that?” said Shefveland with a wide grin, giving his physician a quick embrace.

This experimental therapy marks  an entirely new way to treat cancer — if scientists can make it work, safely. Early-stage studies are stirring hope as one-time infusions of  supercharged immune cells help a remarkable number of patients with  intractable leukemia or lymphoma.

Full story: AP News


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