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‘Ray of hope’: New advances in fighting a range of cancers
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‘Ray of hope’: New advances in fighting a range of cancers

At a recent annual meeting of American Society of Clinical Oncology, experts spoke on the benefits of new drugs that helps people with cancer
There have been several advances in the fight against cancer that have been recently spoken about in the annual meeting of American Society of Clinical Oncology.
College students hold umbrellas to make a formation of pink ribbon during a breast cancer awareness campaign in Chennai on October 31, 2022. (Photo by Arun SANKAR / AFP)

New advances in the fight against a range of cancers have been revealed at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Chicago.

Lung cancer

One of the trial results has raised hopes for a new weapon against lung cancer, the deadliest of all cancers.

The drug osimertinib was shown to halve the risk of death from a certain type of lung cancer when taken daily after the surgery to remove the tumor. 

The daily pill targets with non-small cell cancer — by far the most common type — as well as a mutation of their epidermal growth factor receptor, or EGFR.

Iris Pauporte, head of research at France’s League Against Cancer, told AFP the advance was a “big ray of hope” for this type of cancer, for which progress has been slow.

Muriel Dahan, head of research at Unicancer, said that if the results are confirmed, it “should change” common practice in treating this kind of lung cancer.

Systematic testing for the EGFR mutation would also become necessary for people suffering from lung cancer, she added.

Brain cancer

Another treatment, called vorasidenib, was found to significantly prolong the progression-free survival of people with brain tumor glioma, according to clinical trial results.

The daily pill, developed by French pharma firm Servier, aims to block an enzyme responsible for the progression of some brain cancers, which have been particularly difficult to treat.

Patrick Therasse, Servier’s vice-president of oncology research, told AFP that there “have been few therapeutic advances for brain tumors over the last 20 years.”

“Thanks to our targeted treatment, persons avoided cancer progression for 27.7 months, compared to 11.1 months by those taking a placebo,” he added.

Fabrice Andre, head of research at France’s Gustave Roussy cancer centre said,  “Precision medicine opens a door [for the treatment of a] disease for which there was nothing until now.”

“It means that science can unblock situations that were catastrophic,” he told AFP.

Unicancer’s Dahan said it was important to “remain cautious” but added that “this could become the new therapeutic standard — depending on further trials.”

Breast cancer

Preliminary trial results also indicated the drug ribociclib reduced the risk of breast cancer recurring by 25 percent for a large group of early-stage survivors.

The drug is already widely approved around the world. It was tested in combination with hormonal therapy.

ASCO expert Rita Nanda said it was a “very important and practice-changing clinical trial.”

Cervical cancer

There was also good news for people with early-stage cervical cancer with a low risk of progression.

There was no greater risk of cancer returning for people who get a simple hysterectomy, in which the uterus and cervix are removed, than a radical hysterectomy, in which the uppermost part of the vagina is also removed, according to phase three trials.

League Against Cancer’s Pauporte said this was “good news,” adding that “it shows that it’s not just progress involving drugs that was important.”

Ovarian cancer

A trial also presented at ASCO showed that taking the antibody treatment mirvetuximab soravtansine significantly improved the survival rate of people with ovarian cancer, a particularly deadly form of cancer.

ASCO expert Merry Jennifer Markham said the treatment “demonstrates progress and offers hope for these people.”

Rectal cancer

Study results released in Chicago indicated that people with locally advanced rectal cancer could receive chemotherapy without getting radiation therapy before undergoing surgery.

This would spare people from the brutal side effects of radiation.

Vaccines

Vaccines that treat existing cancer have long been a goal of the medical community.

Preliminary studies announced at the ASCO meeting involved vaccines targeting lung cancer, head and neck cancers, brain tumor glioblastoma and the cancer-causing HPV virus.

Christophe Le Tourneau, an oncologist at France’s Curie Institute which presented a study about a vaccine for a certain form of HPV, said there has been “significant technological progress” in the area recently.

“Therapeutic vaccines, we talk about them more and more, and there are more and more trials in progress,” he said.

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