US regulators approve 2nd gene therapy for blood cancer

The US Food and Drug Administration approved a second gene therapy for a blood cancer, on Wednesday.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allowed sales of Yescartas, a one-time custom-made treatment for aggressive lymphoma in adults from Kite Pharma.

Like the first gene therapy, approved in August, it uses CAR-T cells to combat cancer.

Both gene therapies are approved to treat cancers that have been virtually unresponsive to all other treatments. 

Kite Pharma cell therapy specialists at the company’s manufacturing facility in California prepare blood cells from a patient to be engineered in the lab to fight cancer. On Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration approved sales of its new therapy, Yescarta as the second gene therapy for use in the treatment of cancer

‘In just several decades, gene therapy has gone from being a promising concept to a practical solution to deadly and largely untreatable forms of cancer,’ FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb said in a statement.

Yescarta will cost $373,000 per patient, according to drug-maker Gilead Sciences. Kite became a subsidiary of Foster City, California-based Gilead this month.

CAR-T treatment uses gene therapy techniques not to fix disease-causing genes but to turbocharge T cells, immune system soldiers that cancer can often evade. The T cells are filtered from a patient’s blood, reprogrammed to target and kill cancer cells, and then hundreds of millions of copies are grown.

Returned to the patient, all the revved-up cells can continue multiplying to fight disease for months or years. That’s why these immunotherapy treatments are called ‘living drugs.’

‘Today’s approval of Yescarta is a very significant advance for lymphoma patients and for the cancer community as a whole,’ Louis J. DeGennaro, president of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, said in a statement. ‘Immunotherapy is dramatically changing the way we approach blood cancer treatment.’

Kite’s therapy is for patients with three types of aggressive, or fast-growing, large B-cell lymphoma. The most common one accounts for about a third of the estimated 72,000 new cases of non-Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosed each year.

HOW DOES CAR-T TREATMENT WORK? 

CAR-T therapy starts with filtering key immune cells called T cells from a patient’s blood. 

In a lab, a gene is then inserted into the T cells that prompts them to grow a receptor that targets a special marker found on some blood cancers. 

Millions of copies of the new T cells are grown in the lab and then injected into the patient’s bloodstream where they can seek out and destroy cancer cells. 

Doctors call it a ‘living drug’ – permanently altered cells that continue to multiply in the body into an army to fight the disease. 

Yescarta, also known as axicabtagene ciloleucel, was approved for patients who have already been treated with at least two cancer drugs that either didn’t work for them or eventually stopped working.

At that point, patients are generally out of options and only have about a 10 percent chance of even temporary remission of their cancer, said Dr. Frederick Locke, director of research for the Immune Cell Therapy Program at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida. Locke helped run patient tests of Yescarta.

‘This is really an exciting advance for patients without hope,’ Locke said.

Yescarta is not a benign treatment, though: Three people died after getting the treatment, which can cause serious side effects. The FDA is requiring Kite to do a long-term safety study and train hospitals to quickly spot and handle those reactions.

In the key test, Yescarta was given to 101 patients. About 72 percent saw their cancer shrink and about half showed no sign of disease eight months later.

While it is billed as a one-time treatment, because the patients’ cancer is so far advanced, it returns in some. The therapy is still working in most study participants, so the average duration of its effects isn’t known yet.

A different type of gene therapy is waiting in the wings at the FDA. Spark Therapeutics’ treatment for a rare form of blindness could be approved within months. It aims to improve vision by replacing a defective gene needed to process light.

Other gene therapies for blood cancers are being tested and scientists think they may work for solid tumors within several years. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk