http://theweek.com/article/index/228785/the-smart-bomb-therapy-that-blasts-breast-cancer
A promising new study shows that a powerful drug can
attach directly to tumor cells while leaving healthy cells relatively
untouched
Researchers are excited about a new cancer
therapy that explicitly targets breast cancer cells while leaving
healthy ones alone. The experimental "smart bomb,"
which attaches directly to tumors before killing them, is being hailed
as "a major step forward" in the fight against cancer and could
potentially reach the market within a year. Here's what you should know
about the breakthrough:
Why is it called a "smart bomb"?
The treatment,
referred to by doctors as T-DM1, combines two proven therapies to blast
cancer cells: The drug Herceptine, a gene-targeted therapy sometimes
used on patients whose tumors overproduce a specific protein, and a
cancer-blasting form of chemotherapy so poisonous that it can't be
administered alone. The two are bonded together by a chemical that
unleashes when it comes into contact with breast cancer cells,
delivering a potent payload that — unlike other cancer-fighting
treatments — leaves healthy cells out of harm's way. Hence, T-DM1's
"smart bomb" moniker.
How effective is it?
About 1,000 women with
advanced breast cancer were given the drug. After two years, 65 percent
of the women who received T-DM1 were still alive versus 47 of a control
group administered standard treatment. More tests are necessary,
however, because the margin was just below the rigid criteria cancer
researchers use before declaring a new treatment a winner.
Why is this such a breakthrough?It's the first
study that proves tumors can be precisely targeted with an antibody,
minimizing uncomfortable side effects. "People don't lose their hair,
they don't throw up. They don't need nausea medicines, they don't need
transfusions," study leader Dr. Kimberly Blackwell of Duke University tells The Associated Press.
When might T-DM1 become available?
The drug's
parent company, Roche, plans to file for FDA marketing approval in the
U.S. and Europe by the end of the year. Shanu Modi, a New York breast
cancer oncologist, who was not involved in the study, tells Bloomberg Businessweek: If T-DM1 is approved, "it is going to be rapidly taken up by the oncology community. For sure, I will be using a lot of it."
Sources: Associated Press, Bloomberg Businessweek, Wall Street Journal