Curing Death
  Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Subscribe to CuringDeath.com RSS Fee Subscribe

Studies New Treatment for Advanced Melanoma (12/22/2007)

Tags:
melanoma, cancer

University of Illinois at Chicago researchers are participating in a multi-center research trial to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of Allovectin-7, an investigational treatment for advanced melanoma.

Allovectin-7 is a gene-based immunotherapy for certain types of cancer. The therapy is designed to train the body's immune system to recognize and destroy tumor cells. The phase 3 study will determine if Allovectin-7 is more effective than standard chemotherapy for treating people with advanced melanoma.

"Melanoma, like many types of cancer, is often successful at keeping the body from attacking it," said Dr. Michael Warso, associate professor of surgical oncology at UIC and an investigator on the study. "One of the goals of treatment is to change things so the body can identify and attack the melanoma. We believe that Allovectin-7 triggers several of the body's natural immune response mechanisms to recognize and attack the tumors, both locally and throughout the body."

To be eligible for the study, patients must be at least 18 years old and have confirmed recurrent metastatic melanoma with at least one tumor large enough to inject -- about the size of a pea. Patients who have received previous chemotherapy for melanoma are ineligible. In addition, patients with lung lesions can be included, but those with liver or brain lesions cannot.

Approximately 375 patients nationwide will be enrolled to receive either Allovectin-7 alone or the current standard chemotherapy (dacarbazine or temozolomide) alone. Two thirds of enrolled patients will be randomly assigned to receive Allovectin-7 and the remaining third will receive chemotherapy.

Allovectin-7 will be administered by a weekly injection into the tumor for six consecutive weeks. The injection cycle may be repeated every eight weeks. Participants will be closely monitored to assess disease status, treatment safety and tolerability. Patients whose melanoma does not worsen will be encouraged to continue on the treatment and be assessed for up to two years.

Warso said the investigational agent can be given on an outpatient basis and has been safe and well-tolerated in clinical trials to date.

Melanoma is among the fastest-growing cancer indications, rising at a 3 percent to 5 percent annual rate over the last 30 years. The American Cancer Society estimates that in 2007 about 60,000 new cases of melanoma will be diagnosed in the United States and over 8,000 patients will die. The exact cause of melanoma is not always clear, but exposure to ultraviolet radiation from sunlight is a major risk factor. Melanoma is more likely to occur in those having fair skin, a large number of moles, a history of sun tanning or sunburns, or close relatives with the disease.

Patients whose melanoma is caught early can often be cured with surgery. However, advanced melanoma that has spread beyond the original site to other parts of the body usually requires additional treatment, such as chemotherapy. Because cures at this stage are rare, therapy for late-stage melanoma has been focused on reducing the tumor burden and increasing a patient's length of survival. Standard chemotherapy produces poor long-lasting response rates and often presents serious side effects.

"My patients are looking for the best treatment options available to them," Warso said. Although it is optimal to catch cancer before it progresses, he said, many melanoma patients are first diagnosed after the disease has spread to other organs.

Allovectin-7 is a registered trademark of Vical Incorporated, which developed the investigational agent and is funding the trial.

For more information about the study, please visit www.melanomatrial.com or call (312) 413-3863.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Illinois

Personal Loan - Credit Counseling - Internet Marketing - Phoenix Pools

Post Comments:

Search

Recent Articles
Research Examines Variations of Rare Lung Disease 8/28/2008

Chronic stress alters our genetic immune response 8/28/2008

New Protein Survey Upends Understanding of Cell Death Process 8/28/2008

Keeping cells youthful: How telomere-building proteins get drawn into the fold 8/27/2008

Diabetes study serves up brand new bread 8/27/2008

Anti-Cancer Flower Power 8/27/2008

Stem cell indicator should boost bowel cancer survival rates 8/27/2008

Discovery Opens Door for Drugs to Fight Bird Flu, Other Influenza Epidemics 8/27/2008

Caesarean babies more likely to develop diabetes 8/27/2008

Scientists identify new drug target against virulent type of breast cancer 8/26/2008

Researchers Studying Pythons For Clues To Heart Disease 8/26/2008

Alcohol consumption can cause too much cell death, fetal abnormalities 8/26/2008

Normalizing tumor vessels to improve cancer therapy 8/26/2008

New hope for stroke patients 8/26/2008

Rapid test for pathogens developed 8/25/2008

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.
Web Doodle, LLC does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Please read our disclaimer