UCSF Brain Tumor Vaccine Trial Shows Promising Results

A vaccine for treating a glioma, a recurrent cancer of the central nervous system that occurs primarily in the brain, has shown promise in preliminary data from a clinical trial at the University of California, San Francisco.


Findings from a group of 12 study patients showed that vitespen vaccination (trademarked as Oncophage) was effective in stimulating the patient’s immune system to attack the tumor cells, a function that is known medically as tumor-specific immune response. All the patients had recurrent, high-grade glioma, and all showed the immune response. The vaccine is made from the patient’s own tumor.

The clinical trial was conducted by the UCSF Brain Tumor Research Center. Results were presented April 16 at the 75th annual meeting of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons in Washington, DC.

“In this trial, we have observed a correlation between immune response as a result of Oncophage vaccination and potential clinical benefit,” said Andrew T. Parsa, MD, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Neurological Surgery at UCSF and recipient of the 2007 Young Investigator Award at AANS. “We are encouraged by the prolonged improvement in overall survival rates, although this phase 1/2 study is not designed to primarily evaluate efficacy. The patients in this trial represent the most challenging patient population to treat.”

Of the 12 patients being treated, eight can currently be evaluated for overall survival, while four are still receiving treatment. Seven out of the eight patients have exceeded the historical median benchmark of 6.5 months survival from time of recurrence. The investigators will continue to follow the patients for overall survival. Based on these results, a larger, multi-center phase 2 study is planned for late 2007.

Derived from each individual’s tumor, vitespen contains the “fingerprint” of the patient’s particular cancer and is designed to reprogram the body’s immune system to target only cancer cells bearing this fingerprint. The vaccine is intended to leave healthy tissue unaffected and limit the debilitating side effects typically associated with traditional cancer treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Vitespen has been granted fast-track and orphan drug designations from the Food and Drug Administration for both metastatic melanoma (skin cancer) and renal cell carcinoma (kidney cancer).

Reviewing the presentation at AANS, Henry Brem, MD, director of neurosurgery at the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, noted, “This is an encouraging study of a therapeutic cancer vaccine that targets multiple tumor antigens, supported by rigorous immuno-monitoring. A larger phase 2 trial is certainly warranted to evaluate efficacy.” Brem is a developer of the first approved local therapy for glioma.

The UCSF clinical trial is a phase1/2 study designed to establish the feasibility, safety and preliminary efficacy of vaccination in patients with recurrent, high-grade glioma. The trial involves two groups of six patients, both of whom receive a minimum of four injections. The first group receives biweekly vaccinations and the second receives weekly vaccinations. Patients are monitored for immune response before, during and after treatment.

The UCSF investigators will continue to follow patients for progression-free survival and overall survival. According to investigators, no adverse events or toxicity identified were considered attributable to the vaccine.

Cheryl Canagelo, a 52-year-old woman from Oakley, Calif., came to UCSF for a second opinion after undergoing radiation and chemotherapy elsewhere for treatment of a glioma. At UCSF she learned that part of the tumor was still present, and she enrolled in the vitespen vaccine trial.

Once the chemotherapy was out of her system, Parsa performed surgery, just four days before Christmas. He removed all but a very small amount of tumor that was near an area that could affect her speech. The removed tissue was sent to Antigenics, the Massachusetts biotech company that produces the vaccine from the patient’s tumor tissue. Altogether, Canagelo has now received seven injections of vaccine.

“My most recent MRI showed that there is no tumor,” Canagelo said. “I haven’t had any side effects from the treatment, and I’m getting stronger every day. I would urge patients to seek out second opinions and investigate clinical trials. I can tell you I am so glad I did.”

“Our goal is to change the management of recurrent glioma from a life threatening disease into a chronic disease with extended survival and improved quality of life for patients,” Parsa said. “Although our survival data are encouraging, a larger phase 2 study will be required to determine the benefit of vitespen for patients with recurrent glioma. The consistent, tumor specific immune response seen in these patients suggests that in the right patient population, the vaccine could have a significant impact.”

The clinical trial was funded by the American Brain Tumor Association and the National Cancer Institute’s Specialized Program of Research Excellence.

UCSF is a leading university that advances health worldwide by conducting advanced biomedical research, educating graduate students in the life sciences and health professions, and providing complex patient care.

H.R. 1124 Brain Tumor Action Month

Click here to find your Representative’s office to request support of H.R. 1124 - the bill asking that May be designated Brain Tumor Action Month.

SPEAK UP FOR BRAIN TUMOR PATIENTS. Join the North American Brain Tumor Coalition in Washington, D.C. on May 5 and 6, 2008, to press the case for brain tumor research and care.

Despite the efforts of some of the world’s finest researchers to develop better therapies, individuals who are diagnosed with brain tumors still do not have adequate treatment choices. In fact, the outlook for brain tumor patients has not improved significantly in the last 20 years. You can help change that situation by joining us in the fight for a stronger brain tumor research program – that means more federal dollars for brain tumor research, strong support for translational and clinical brain tumor research programs, and enhanced collaboration among brain tumor researchers.

The NABTC is also working to remove barriers to quality care through elimination of the Medicare waiting period. Your voice is needed to persuade Congress to enact legislation to end the two-year waiting period to receive Medicare benefits.

Get involved by joining us in the halls of Congress on May 5 and 6, or by taking action in your community during Brain Tumor Action Week from May 4 to 10. Please go to http://www.nabraintumor.org/registration08.html for more information and to register for the Washington, D.C. advocacy program.

ABC News: Vaccine Helps Man Survive Deadly Cancer

Ryan DeGrand Was Given Less Than Two Years to Live Before He Tried an Experimental Cancer Vaccine:

Developing an effective cancer vaccine has been a frustratingly elusive goal in medicine. Now researchers at Duke University Medical Center believe they might have one, harnessing the most effective and efficient of all disease fighters: the body's own immune system. Watch the story on "World News Tonight" at 6:30 p.m. ET. It appears to have helped Ryan DeGrand. DeGrand was living the American dream. Married with two children, he runs a successful golf equipment company in St. Louis,...

Cancer Cells Spread By Releasing 'Bubbles', According To A New Study

ScienceDaily (2008-04-21) -- A new fundamental mechanism of how tumour cells communicate has just been discovered. These findings could change our view on how cancerous tissues work and lead to major clinical innovations.

Patient Trial For Virus That Attacks Brain Cancer Cells

ScienceDaily (2008-04-16) -- A common, naturally occurring virus that attacks cancer cells but appears to be harmless to normal cells is being studied as a possible treatment for malignant, highly aggressive and deadly brain tumors called gliomas. Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center are among a few in the United States evaluating this experimental therapy.

Documentary On PBS Tonight: The Truth About Cancer

Tonights 2 hour documentary takes a look at the distance we've come, and have yet to travel, in the messy battle still being waged by patients, their families, and their doctors—decades after President Nixon declared a "war on cancer" in 1971.

Following the program is a frank discussion hosted by breast-cancer survivor Linda Ellerbee with a panel of experts, each of whom has also had cancer. U.S. News's Health Editor Dr. Bernadine Healy participates, sharing her own experiences with brain cancer. "I think all too often people who get the diagnosis of cancer think that they have to fold their tents and go off and get ready to die—that it's a dying time," says Healy. Her take—and the title of her memoir, released last year—it that it's a "living time." The challenge we are faced with now, she says, is to turn cancer into a manageable chronic disease, not only in a medical sense but especially in an emotional one
http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-medicine/2008/04/15/a-moving-documentary-about-families-and-cancer.html

Sangamo BioSciences Reports Positive Data On ZFP Program For Glioblastoma Cancer - Update [SGMO]

4/15/2008 8:49:23 AM Tuesday, before the bell, Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. (SGMO) reported positive data in a mouse tumor model from its ZFP Therapeutic program for the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme, a progressive and fatal brain cancer. Sangamo said it expects to file an Investigative New Drug application for this cell therapy in 2008.

Stem Cells And Cancer: Scientists Investigate A Fine Balancing Act

ScienceDaily (2008-04-14) -- The mechanisms normally involved in balancing different functions of stem cells may also contribute to cancer. Scientists are delving into these mechanisms to understand how stem cells are normally regulated, and what role they may play in malignant brain tumors.

Battling brain cancer, heading to Hollywood

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (WTHI) - While David Cook has been singing on American Idol, in Terre Haute his brother 36-year-old brother Adam Cook has been battling brain cancer.

Now Adam and his wife are traveling to Hollywood to see David sing on the hit television show. Cooks wife, Kendra, told News 10 that he is determined to make the trip. "Originally they [the doctors] wanted to bring him in [to the airport] on a gurney and he said ‘You know I have to show people that I'm strong and that I'm going to make this trip.'"

Quiet yet determined, Cook entered the terminal at Terre Haute International Airport. With the aid of just a cane, he made his way around the room, greeting family and friends before his flight.

Targeting Brain Cancer

Click here for a print-friendly version

Reported April 2, 2008

CLEVELAND, Ohio (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- You hear the words brain cancer and you say -- it could never happen to me. But one person every hour of every day is diagnosed with it. Now, there's a new, more precise, more powerful way to kill brain tumors.

BiPar Sciences Expands Clinical Program for BSI-201, a Novel DNA Repair Inhibitor, in Brain Cancer

BRISBANE, Calif., April 10 /PRNewswire/ -- BiPar Sciences, Inc. today announced the expansion of the clinical program for the company's lead product candidate, BSI-201, into glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most common glioma in adults. BSI-201, the first poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitor in BiPar's DNA repair portfolio, crosses the blood-brain barrier, a unique property that enables its targeted investigation in the brain tumor setting. This study is being conducted by investigators from the New Approaches to Brain Tumor Therapy (NABTT) consortium, a National Cancer Institute-funded research group. In addition to GBM, BiPar is currently enrolling BSI-201 in a randomized Phase 2 trial for triple-negative breast cancer and is initiating Phase 2 trials in uterine and BRCA-negative ovarian cancers.
"We believe a multi-drug strategy is the best approach to battling GBM. There is a significant need for new treatments that can offer GBM patients and their families additional hope," said Stuart A. Grossman, M.D., professor of oncology, medicine and neurological surgery at Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins Hospital and the co-chairperson for this study.
"BSI-201 is a promising agent that has been well tolerated in combination with cytotoxic therapies in patients with solid tumors and potentially addresses a key pathway by which GBM cells resist the effects of existing medications. We are hopeful that BSI-201 will safely potentiate the power of current therapies for GBM and improve survival in this difficult-to-treat cancer," said Jaishri Blakeley, M.D., Assistant Professor of Neurology, Oncology and Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins and the study chairperson for this study.
"The scientific observations that BSI-201 crosses the blood-brain barrier and has a mechanistic basis to synergize with the standard treatment of GBM makes this a promising study," said BiPar Executive Vice President Barry Sherman, M.D. "It is the promise of this approach that encouraged the leaders of NABTT to evaluate BSI-201 in patients with GBM."
GBM is an aggressive form of brain cancer that strikes 10,000 patients a year in the United States. Currently, patients are often treated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy where the median survival is under 15 months. The initial study phase will evaluate the safety and tolerability of BSI-201 in combination with temozolomide given at standard doses. The Phase 2 component will assess BSI-201 combined with temozolomide plus radiation therapy in

Data-handling technique finds genes to be team players in curbing brain cancer cell growth



The search for cancer genes is increasingly a matter of molecular “To Tell the Truth,” as scientists seek to distinguish genes actually involved in the disease from those that are imposters. Powerful gene-scanning technology often reveals hundreds or thousands of genetic irregularities in tumor tissue, making it critical for investigators to winnow out the true culprits.

Unlocking Mysteries Of Brain Cancer, Stroke

ScienceDaily (2008-04-04) -- New studies will delve into some of the crucial issues surrounding death by brain tumors and stroke. The research will aim to find links between chemical signals in the brain and the reasons why brain tumors or strokes become fatal.

Buzz Apparel - Support Brain Tumor Research

Fox Valley Brain Tumor Coalition - Journey of Hope Walk

The Journey of Hope is our major fundraiser of the year, allowing us to raise most of the funds that we need to survive. This event is critical to the success of this group, so we hope you can join us!

With over 750 walkers, the Fox Valley Brain Tumor Coalition puts on a great party the Saturday after Labor Day every year. The non-competitive walk is held on the grounds of NeuroSpine Center of Wisconsin. Our paved ½ mile trail is short enough for nearly everyone to make at least one lap around, and is accessible to wheelchairs! For those who like more of a challenge, we encourage as many laps as you are able to do!

The day is a celebration of those fighting brain tumors and remembering those who have lost their battle. The walk starts with a ceremony at the Tree of Hope, with testimonials from those most affected by this disease, as well as a dedication from neurosurgeon Thomas Wascher MD, one of our biggest supporters.

Once you have built up your appetite from the walk, come in to our party tent for a great home-cooked picnic. We have fresh roasted corn-on-the-cob, hamburgers, hot dogs, chips and sweets! Vegetarian selections are available for those with restricted diets.

A huge silent auction, kids games, music, pictures and more makes this party fun for everyone!

As always, dogs are welcome, but should always be on a leash…we will provide water for our four legged friends!

Your registration cost of $10 (yes still only $10 after all these years!!!) includes a great t-shirt with all of our corporate sponsors proudly displayed, lunch and all the fun you can handle!

New this year is our online registration and personal web page, making it easier for your family and friends to support your efforts.

My Team