By Laurie McginleyThe Washington Post
The oncologist was blunt: Stefanie Joho's colon cancer was raging out of control and there was nothing more she could do. Flanked by her parents and sister, the 23-year-old felt something wet on her shoulder. She looked up to see her father weeping.
"I felt dead inside, utterly demoralized, ready to be done," Joho remembers.
But her younger sister couldn't accept that. When the family got back to Joho's apartment in New York's Flatiron district, Jess opened her laptop and began searching frantically for clinical trials, using medical words she'd heard but not fully understood. An hour later, she came into her sister's room and showed her what she'd found.
"I'm not letting you give up," she told Stefanie. "This is not the end."
That search led to a contact at Johns Hopkins University, and a few days later, Joho got a call from a cancer geneticist co-leading a study there.
"Get down here as fast as you can!" Luis Diaz said. "We are having tremendous success with patients like you."
What followed is an illuminating tale of how one woman's intersection with experimental research helped open a new frontier in cancer treatment with approval of a drug that, for the first time, targets a genetic feature in a tumor rather than the disease's location in the body.
The breakthrough, now made official by the Food and Drug Administration, immediately could benefit some patients with certain kinds of advanced cancer that aren't responding to chemotherapy. Each should be tested for that genetic signature, scientists stress.
"These are people facing death sentences," said Hopkins geneticist Bert Vogelstein. "This treatment might keep some of them in remission for a long time."
A pivotal small trial
In August 2014, Joho stumbled into Hopkins for her first infusion of the immunotherapy drug Keytruda. She was in agony from a malignant mass in her midsection, and even with the copious amounts of OxyContin she was swallowing, she needed a new fentanyl patch on her arm every 48 hours. Yet within just days, the excruciating back pain had eased. Then an unfamiliar sensation hunger returned. She burst into tears when she realized what it was.
As months went by, her tumor shrank and ultimately disappeared. She stopped treatment this past August, free from all signs of disease.
The small trial in Baltimore was pivotal, and not only for the young marketing professional. It showed that immunotherapy could attack colon and other cancers thought to be unstoppable. The key was their tumors' genetic defect, known as mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency akin to a missing spell-check on their DNA. As the DNA copies itself, the abnormality prevents any errors from being fixed. In the cancer cells, that means huge numbers of mutations that are good targets for immunotherapy.
The treatment approach isn't a panacea, however. The glitch under scrutiny which can arise spontaneously or be inherited is found in just 4 percent of cancers overall. But bore in on a few specific types, and the scenario changes dramatically. The problem occurs in up to 20 percent of colon cancers and about 40 percent of endometrial malignancies cancer in the lining of the uterus.
In the United States, researchers estimate that initially about 15,000 people with this defect may be helped by this immunotherapy. That number is likely to rise sharply as doctors begin using it earlier on eligible patients.
Joho was among the first.
Even before Joho got sick, cancer had cast a long shadow on her family. Her mother has Lynch syndrome, a hereditary disorder that sharply raises the risk of certain cancers, and since 2003, Priscilla Joho has suffered colon cancer, uterine cancer and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin.
Stefanie's older sister, Vanessa, had already tested positive for Lynch syndrome, and Stefanie planned to get tested when she turned 25. But at 22, several months after she graduated from New York University, she began feeling unusually tired. She blamed the fatigue on her demanding job. Her primary-care physician, aware of her mother's medical history, ordered a colonoscopy.
When Joho woke up from the procedure, the gastroenterologist looked "like a ghost," she said. A subsequent CT scan revealed a very large tumor in her colon. She'd definitely inherited Lynch syndrome.
She underwent surgery in January 2013 at Philadelphia's Fox Chase Cancer Center, where her mother had been treated. The news was good: The cancer didn't appear to have spread, so she could skip chemotherapy and follow up with scans every three months.
By August of that year, though, Joho started having relentless back pain. Tests detected the invasive tumor in her abdomen. Another operation, and now she started chemo. Once again, in spring 2014, the cancer roared back. Her doctors in New York, where she now was living, switched to a more aggressive chemo regimen.
"This thing is going to kill me," Joho remembered thinking. "It was eating me alive."
Genetics meets immunology
Joho began planning to move to her parents' home in suburban Philadelphia: "I thought, 'I'm dying, and I'd like to breathe fresh air and be around the green and the trees.' "
Her younger sister wasn't ready for her to give up. Jess searched for clinical trials, typing in "immunotherapy" and other terms she'd heard the doctors use. Up popped a trial at Hopkins, where doctors were testing a drug called pembrolizumab.
"Pembro" is part of a class of new medications called checkpoint inhibitors that disable the brakes that keep the immune system from attacking tumors. In September 2014, the treatment was approved by the FDA for advanced melanoma and marketed as Keytruda. The medication made headlines in 2015 when it helped treat former President Jimmy Carter for melanoma that had spread to his brain and liver. It later was cleared for several other malignancies.
Yet researchers still don't know why immunotherapy, once hailed as a game changer, works in only a minority of patients. Figuring that out is important for clinical as well as financial reasons. Keytruda, for example, costs about $150,000 a year.
By the time Joho arrived at Hopkins, the trial had been underway for a year. While an earlier study had shown a similar immunotherapy drug to be effective for a significant proportion of patients with advanced melanoma or lung or kidney cancer, checkpoint inhibitors weren't making headway with colon cancer. A single patient out of 20 had responded in a couple of trials.
Why did some tumors shrink while others didn't? What was different about the single colon cancer patient who benefited? Drew Pardoll, director of the Bloomberg-Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy at Hopkins, and top researcher Suzanne Topalian took the unusual step of consulting with the cancer geneticists who worked one floor up.
"This was the first date in what became the marriage of cancer genetics and cancer immunology," Pardoll said.
In a brainstorming session, the geneticists were quick to offer their theories. They suggested that the melanoma and lung cancer patients had done best because those cancers have lots of mutations, a consequence of exposure to sunlight and cigarette smoke. The mutations produce proteins recognized by the immune system as foreign and ripe for attack, and the drug boosts the system's response.
And that one colon-cancer patient? As Vogelstein recalls, "We all said in unison, 'He must have MMR deficiency!' " because such a genetic glitch would spawn even more mutations.
When the patient's tumor tissue was tested, it was indeed positive for the defect.
The researchers decided to run a small trial, led by Hopkins immunologist Dung Le and geneticist Diaz, to determine whether the defect could predict a patient's response to immunotherapy. The pharmaceutical company Merck provided its still-experimental drug pembrolizumab. Three groups of volunteers were recruited: 10 colon cancer patients whose tumors had the genetic problem; 18 colon cancer patients without it; and 7 patients with other malignancies with the defect.
The first results, published in 2015 in the New England Journal of Medicine, were striking. Four out of the 10 colon cancer patients with the defect and 5 out of the other 7 cancer patients with the abnormality responded to the drug. In the remaining group, nothing. Since then, updated numbers have reinforced that a high proportion of patients with the genetic feature benefit from the drug, often for a lengthy period. Other trials by pharmaceutical companies have shown similar results.
The Hopkins investigators found that tumors with the defect had, on average, 1,700 mutations, compared with only 70 for tumors without the problem. That confirmed the theory that high numbers of mutations make it more likely the immune system will recognize and attack cancer if it gets assistance from immunotherapy.
For Joho, now 27 and living in suburban Philadelphia, the hard lesson from the past few years is clear: The cancer field is changing so rapidly that patients can't rely on their doctors to find them the best treatments.
"Oncologists can barely keep up," she said. "My sister found a trial I was a perfect candidate for, and my doctors didn't even know it existed."
Her first several weeks on the trial were rough, and she still has some lasting side effects today joint pain in her knees, minor nausea and fatigue.
"I have had to adapt to some new limits," she acknowledged. "But I still feel better than I have in five years."
Excerpt from:
IT'S A START: Newly approved gene therapy may help 4 percent of cancer patients - Sarasota Herald-Tribune
- 001 Faulty Circuits (preview) [Last Updated On: April 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: April 7th, 2010]
- 002 Faulty Circuits (preview) [Last Updated On: April 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: April 7th, 2010]
- 003 Rare flowers and common herbal supplements get unmasked with plant DNA barcoding [Last Updated On: April 20th, 2010] [Originally Added On: April 20th, 2010]
- 004 Rare flowers and common herbal supplements get unmasked with plant DNA barcoding [Last Updated On: April 20th, 2010] [Originally Added On: April 20th, 2010]
- 005 Biomarker Studies Could Realize Goal of More Effective and Personalized Cancer Medicine [Last Updated On: April 27th, 2010] [Originally Added On: April 27th, 2010]
- 006 Biomarker Studies Could Realize Goal of More Effective and Personalized Cancer Medicine [Last Updated On: April 27th, 2010] [Originally Added On: April 27th, 2010]
- 007 Schizophrenia shares genetic links with autism, genome study shows [Last Updated On: May 12th, 2010] [Originally Added On: May 12th, 2010]
- 008 Schizophrenia shares genetic links with autism, genome study shows [Last Updated On: May 12th, 2010] [Originally Added On: May 12th, 2010]
- 009 Alzheimer's: Forestalling the Darkness with New Approaches (preview) [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2010] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2010]
- 010 Alzheimer's: Forestalling the Darkness with New Approaches (preview) [Last Updated On: May 28th, 2010] [Originally Added On: May 28th, 2010]
- 011 Large-Scale Autism Study Reveals Disorder's Genetic Complexity [Last Updated On: June 12th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 12th, 2010]
- 012 Large-Scale Autism Study Reveals Disorder's Genetic Complexity [Last Updated On: June 12th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 12th, 2010]
- 013 Cancer Therapy Goes Viral: Progress Is Made Tackling Tumors with Viruses [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2010]
- 014 Cancer Therapy Goes Viral: Progress Is Made Tackling Tumors with Viruses [Last Updated On: June 24th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 24th, 2010]
- 015 Vaccines Derived from Patients' Tumor Cells Are Individualizing Cancer Treatment [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2010]
- 016 Vaccines Derived from Patients' Tumor Cells Are Individualizing Cancer Treatment [Last Updated On: June 26th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 26th, 2010]
- 017 A genome story: 10th anniversary commentary by Francis Collins [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2010]
- 018 A genome story: 10th anniversary commentary by Francis Collins [Last Updated On: June 29th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 29th, 2010]
- 019 Hair Trigger: How a Cell's Primary Cilium Functions as a Molecular Antenna [Last Updated On: June 30th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 30th, 2010]
- 020 Hair Trigger: How a Cell's Primary Cilium Functions as a Molecular Antenna [Last Updated On: June 30th, 2010] [Originally Added On: June 30th, 2010]
- 021 DNA Drugs Come of Age (preview) [Last Updated On: July 16th, 2010] [Originally Added On: July 16th, 2010]
- 022 DNA Drugs Come of Age (preview) [Last Updated On: July 16th, 2010] [Originally Added On: July 16th, 2010]
- 023 2 Genes Linked to Embryonic Brain Impairment in Down's Syndrome [Last Updated On: July 22nd, 2010] [Originally Added On: July 22nd, 2010]
- 024 2 Genes Linked to Embryonic Brain Impairment in Down's Syndrome [Last Updated On: July 22nd, 2010] [Originally Added On: July 22nd, 2010]
- 025 Stem Cells from Reprogrammed Adult Cells Found to Bring Along Genetic Defects of Their Donors [Last Updated On: October 11th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 11th, 2010]
- 026 Was Darwin a Punk? A Q&A with Punker-Paleontologist Greg Graffin [Last Updated On: October 11th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 11th, 2010]
- 027 Parkinsonian Power Failure: Neuron Degeneration May Be Caused by a Cellular Energy System Breakdown [Last Updated On: October 11th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 11th, 2010]
- 028 Stem Cells from Reprogrammed Adult Cells Found to Bring Along Genetic Defects of Their Donors [Last Updated On: October 11th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 11th, 2010]
- 029 Was Darwin a Punk? A Q&A with Punker-Paleontologist Greg Graffin [Last Updated On: October 11th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 11th, 2010]
- 030 Parkinsonian Power Failure: Neuron Degeneration May Be Caused by a Cellular Energy System Breakdown [Last Updated On: October 11th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 11th, 2010]
- 031 Desperation Drives Parents to Dubious Autism Treatments (preview) [Last Updated On: October 13th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 13th, 2010]
- 032 Desperation Drives Parents to Dubious Autism Treatments (preview) [Last Updated On: October 17th, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 17th, 2010]
- 033 Revolution Postponed: Why the Human Genome Project Has Been Disappointing (preview) [Last Updated On: October 21st, 2010] [Originally Added On: October 21st, 2010]
- 034 Controlling the Brain with Light (preview) [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 035 Optogenetics: Controlling the Brain with Light [Extended Version] [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 036 Clear New Insights into the Genetics of Depression [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 037 TEDMED 2010: Technology and the people [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 038 Bacteria, the anti-cancer soldier [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 039 Revolution Postponed: Why the Human Genome Project Has Been Disappointing (preview) [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 040 Controlling the Brain with Light (preview) [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 041 Optogenetics: Controlling the Brain with Light [Extended Version] [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 042 Clear New Insights into the Genetics of Depression [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 043 TEDMED 2010: Technology and the people [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 044 Bacteria, the anti-cancer soldier [Last Updated On: November 7th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 7th, 2010]
- 045 Scientific regress: When science goes backward [Last Updated On: November 29th, 2010] [Originally Added On: November 29th, 2010]
- 046 Can You Live Forever? Maybe Not--But You Can Have Fun Trying [Last Updated On: January 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: January 1st, 2011]
- 047 How to Fix the Obesity Crisis (preview) [Last Updated On: January 22nd, 2011] [Originally Added On: January 22nd, 2011]
- 048 Scientific regress: When science goes backward [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 049 Can You Live Forever? Maybe Not--But You Can Have Fun Trying [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 050 How to Fix the Obesity Crisis (preview) [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 051 Personalizing cancer medicine [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 052 New Salmonella strain delivers gene-based therapy to fight virus in mice [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 053 Personalizing cancer medicine [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 054 New Salmonella strain delivers gene-based therapy to fight virus in mice [Last Updated On: February 14th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 14th, 2011]
- 055 Steps toward a Bionic Eye [Last Updated On: February 18th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 18th, 2011]
- 056 Steps toward a Bionic Eye [Last Updated On: February 20th, 2011] [Originally Added On: February 20th, 2011]
- 057 Giving HIV a Poor Reception: New AIDS Treatment Tinkers with Immune Cell Genes [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2011] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2011]
- 058 Giving HIV a Poor Reception: New AIDS Treatment Tinkers with Immune Cell Genes [Last Updated On: March 6th, 2011] [Originally Added On: March 6th, 2011]
- 059 Smaller, cheaper, faster: Does Moore's law apply to solar cells? [Last Updated On: March 27th, 2011] [Originally Added On: March 27th, 2011]
- 060 Smaller, cheaper, faster: Does Moore's law apply to solar cells? [Last Updated On: March 27th, 2011] [Originally Added On: March 27th, 2011]
- 061 New Drugs for Hepatitis C on the Horizon [Last Updated On: April 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: April 10th, 2011]
- 062 Can we capture all of the world's carbon emissions? [Last Updated On: April 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: April 10th, 2011]
- 063 New Drugs for Hepatitis C on the Horizon [Last Updated On: April 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: April 10th, 2011]
- 064 Can we capture all of the world's carbon emissions? [Last Updated On: April 10th, 2011] [Originally Added On: April 10th, 2011]
- 065 Drug-resistant genes found in cholera and dysentery strains in New Delhi water supply [Last Updated On: May 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: May 1st, 2011]
- 066 Fast Track to Vaccines: How Systems Biology Speeds Drug Development (preview) [Last Updated On: May 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: May 1st, 2011]
- 067 Drug-resistant genes found in cholera and dysentery strains in New Delhi water supply [Last Updated On: May 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: May 1st, 2011]
- 068 Fast Track to Vaccines: How Systems Biology Speeds Drug Development (preview) [Last Updated On: May 1st, 2011] [Originally Added On: May 1st, 2011]
- 069 Autism's Tangled Genetics Full of Rare and Varied Mutations [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2011]
- 070 A New Look at Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (preview) [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2011]
- 071 Autism's Tangled Genetics Full of Rare and Varied Mutations [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2011]
- 072 A New Look at Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (preview) [Last Updated On: June 19th, 2011] [Originally Added On: June 19th, 2011]
- 073 Close Encounters of Science and Medicine [Last Updated On: July 3rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 3rd, 2011]
- 074 Close Encounters of Science and Medicine [Last Updated On: July 3rd, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 3rd, 2011]
- 075 New Report Details Uphill Battle to Solve the U.S.'s Pain Problem [Last Updated On: July 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 24th, 2011]
- 076 New Report Details Uphill Battle to Solve the U.S.'s Pain Problem [Last Updated On: July 24th, 2011] [Originally Added On: July 24th, 2011]
- 077 A Breath of Fresh Air: New Hope for Cystic Fibrosis Treatment (preview) [Last Updated On: August 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: August 7th, 2011]
- 078 A Breath of Fresh Air: New Hope for Cystic Fibrosis Treatment (preview) [Last Updated On: August 7th, 2011] [Originally Added On: August 7th, 2011]
- 079 Gene therapy improves stem cell transplantation - Video [Last Updated On: October 13th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 13th, 2011]
- 080 THE NEW MORGELLONS HAIR - Video [Last Updated On: October 18th, 2011] [Originally Added On: October 18th, 2011]