Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Sunday, December 17, 2023

Some Good News To Wrap Up A Rather Mixed Year!

This is a cheering piece of news to wrap up 2023! 

Cancer vaccine wards off recurrence for up to three years

By Natasha Robinson - Health Editor

Updated 6:50AM December 15, 2023,

The world’s first cancer vaccine has been found to prevent cancer returning in melanoma patients for as long as three years, new ­results from a major clinical trial show.

The cancer vaccine that has been developed by Moderna is now moving to phase 3 studies after the second tranche of data from the phase 2 study showed the stunning results.

The vaccine, which is dubbed mRNA-4157/V940, is a personalised mRNA vaccine that is given in conjunction with the immunotherapy drug Keytruda. It had already been found to reduce the recurrence of melanoma by 50 per cent in initial human trials when administered alongside the immunotherapy drug.

Now new data shows that among patients with resected high-risk stage III or IV melanoma, adjuvant treatment with the vaccine in combination with Keytruda continued to demonstrate a clinically meaningful improvement in recurrence-free survival for as long as three years. The prevention of cancer recurrence was found in the latter ­stages of the phase 2 trial to be as high as 49 per cent.

“The really important point is that we saw the maintenance of that benefit now out to three years, which gives us confidence that this substantial reduction in the risk of relapse is likely to be durable for a long time,” said Moderna president Stephen Hoge. “Therefore the potential for this therapy is as good as we hoped a year ago.

“I think it’s confirmatory that this really does have the potential to be a new approach to treating cancer patients, and across a wide range of cancers.”

Cancer vaccines are in their infancy and Moderna’s vaccine for melanoma patients is the first that has been developed. The technology was accelerated by Covid-19, when mRNA vaccines were widely trialled and proved effective. The technology is now being invested in heavily around the world, including in Australia which has established a number of research facilities and manufacturing plants.

Cancer vaccines are formulated to be specific to each patient’s cancer and are ­developed based on the individual’s tumour biopsies, which are then genetically sequenced. Scientists identify that person’s cancer cells’ specific mutations and create an mRNA vaccine that primes the immune system’s t-cells to target the ­mutated cells.

“This is an era of individualised medicine,” said Dr Hoge. “This is a medication that’s very different than anything else that’s been used, because you make it for one patient based on what their individual cancer looks like. We’ve always wanted to move down a path of individualised medicine, but this is a sign that we may be going down that path.”

Other cancer vaccines are now in development, including by brain cancer suffering and eminent pathologist Richard Scolyer and his colleague Georgina Long, who are using the melanoma technology and applying it to Professor Scolyer’s brain cancer.

Professor Scolyer announced earlier this year that he was “patient zero in what may become the new frontier of brain cancer treatment”.

Professor Long was a principle investigator in Moderna’s melanoma cancer vaccine. She emphasised the phase 2 study was a small study involving 157 patients and would now need to be replicated in a larger phase 3 trial, which has begun recruiting.

More here:

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/science/cancer-vaccine-wards-off-recurrence-for-up-to-three-years/news-story/26669a33cdea4fc3f86438e2b332bed9

Good news to wrap up the year I reckon.

Thanks to all have read and commented this year – and sorry for the service interruption what I was in Hospital and all that earlier in the year

Any comments on the year past or thoughts for the next year welcome.

A safe and happy festive season to all.

Back some time in January fate willing!

David.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I stand amazed at the furore over $20Million spent on consultants for the Antarctic all year round tarmac project which is now cancelled WHILST NOT A WHISPER IS UTTERED over the $300M++++ spent year after year on the MY HEALTH RECORD proje t which has delivered nothing of value for more than a decade !!!

Gayle Martin said...

St Vincent’s Health Cyber breach will be quickly and quietly swept under the rug; NSW taxpayers will bail out its failing services and gain no additional oversight or say - the answer will be to cut core staff as a demonstration of financial restructuring. There needs to be a redress of these “Private religious organisations’ long gone are the foundations and driving missions - they are headed by corporate staff, they look and smell like private enterprises, they milk the taxpayer with little to no oversight - maybe they need to be treated as private corporations rather than the organisations of times past.

Sarah Conner said...

A great story David thank you. Wishing you a very Merry Christmas

Anonymous said...

Health IT is too complex, too hard, too fragmented, too political for anyone to effectively criticise. A tarmac in the ice in the Antarctic is easy to criticise.