Virus put woman's cancer in remission
(CNN) -- A woman with an incurable cancer is now in remission, thanks, doctors say, to a highly concentrated dose of the measles virus.
For 10 years, Stacy Erholtz, 49, battled multiple myeloma,
a deadly cancer of the blood. Doctors at the Mayo Clinic say she had
received every type of chemotherapy drug available for her cancer and
had undergone two stem cell transplants, only to relapse time and again.
Then researchers gave her
and five other multiple myeloma patients a dose of a highly
concentrated, lab-engineered measles virus similar to the measles
vaccine. In fact, the dose Erholtz received contained enough of the
virus to vaccinate approximately 10 million people.
"The idea here is that a
virus can be trained to specifically damage a cancer and to leave other
tissues in the body unharmed," said the lead study author, Dr. Stephen
Russell.
It's a concept known as
virotherapy, and it's been done before. Mayo Clinic scientists say
thousands of cancer patients have been treated with viruses, but this is
the first case of a patient with a cancer that had spread throughout
the body going into remission.
Erholtz was cancer-free for nine months.
"I think we succeeded
because we pushed the dose higher than others have pushed it," Russell
said. "And I think that is critical. The amount of virus that's in the
bloodstream really is the driver of how much gets into the tumors."
In simple terms, the
measles virus makes cancer cells join together and explode, Mayo Clinic
researcher Dr. Angela Dispenzieri explains. There's also some evidence
to suggest, she says, that the virus is stimulating the patient's immune
system, helping it recognize any recurring cancer cells and "mop that
up."
This treatment is still
in the early testing stages, though. Doctors recently used radiation
therapy to treat a small, localized tumor in Erholtz's body.
And the other patients
in the trial did not go into remission. Tests showed the virus helped
shrink one woman's tumors, but they started growing again soon after.
The other patients' cancers did not respond to the treatment.
Researchers also don't
know whether this virotherapy will help other patients or whether it can
be applied to other types of cancer. The measles virus worked with
these multiple myeloma patients because they are already
immune-deficient, meaning their bodies can't fight off the virus before
it has a chance to attack the cancer cells.
More of the highly
concentrated measles virus is being created now to be used in a larger
clinical trial, Mayo Clinic researchers say. They've developed a
manufacturing process that can produce large amounts of the virus,
Russell says.
"We recently have begun
to think about the idea of a single shot cure for cancer -- and that's
our goal with this therapy," he said.
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