New Hope to Beat Cancer
Aurora St. Luke’s is one of a few institutions in the world to offer skin cancer clinical trial.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090303/CG78204LOGO-b)
The Young Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocyte (Y-TIL) trial is a phase 2 clinical trial being offered with technical support from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in
“I knew that my illness was very serious, but there had to be new opportunities to fight back,” Capstran says. “When I found out about the study at NCI, I knew I had to jump at the chance. Today, I am cancer free.”
The early results from a similar trial at the NCI are exciting for patients with stage-four metastatic melanoma. Published reports for the trial show a 51 percent response rate.
To qualify, all patients must be diagnosed with stage-four metastatic melanoma. During the trial blood is drawn from the patient, along with a sample of the tumor. The T cells, which are the immune system’s killer cells, are extracted from the tumor and re-educated to attack the cancer cells. The patient’s normal immune system is then temporarily suppressed using chemotherapy, and the newly trained T cells are returned to the patient. The T cells are expected to survive, replicate and kill the cancer.
The trial has a capacity for 75 patients over a three-year period. Of those 41 are expected to qualify for the entire process. With the success of this program, the next step is a phase 3 trial where hundreds of patients would be enrolled and treated.
Due to the experimental features of this clinical trial, some portions of the study may not be covered by health insurance. As a not-for-profit, Aurora Health Care‘s philanthropy program has secured more than
Milwaukee’s own Northwestern Mutual Foundation has made its largest health care donation of
To keep the trial affordable for all who participate, an additional
Aurora Health Care is a not-for-profit
Online newsroom: www.Aurora.org/Newsroom
Clinical trial information: www.aurora.org/y-til
SOURCE Aurora Health Care
