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Last Updated: Oct 11, 2012 - 10:22:56 PM
Cancer Channel

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Latest Research : Cancer

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Using Ontak to deplete Tregs in Ovarian Cancer

Jul 16, 2005 - 12:07:00 AM
"This study will test the hypothesis that Ontak improves tumor immunity by killing regulatory T cells (Tregs) in patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer,"

Co-investigators for the Ontak trial for advanced ovarian cancer are Weiping Zou, Brian Barnett, Melissa Brammer and Pui (Joan) Cheng of the Tulane University School of Medicine, and Danny Barnhill at the LSU Health Sciences Center. Sixty patients may volunteer for the study, which is being conducted at the Tulane Cancer Center and the Tulane-LSU General Clinical Research Center at the Medical Center of Louisiana - New Orleans (Charity Hospital). Patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer meeting all eligibility criteria, and selected for the study, will be treated with Ontak once a month.

 
[RxPG] The Tulane University Section of Hematology and Medical Oncology is investigating a novel treatment for ovarian cancer by using intravenous Ontak to deplete harmful cells that inhibit the body's natural immune response to fight cancer. Ovarian cancer is the fifth leading cancer killer of women in the United States.

"This study will test the hypothesis that Ontak improves tumor immunity by killing regulatory T cells (Tregs) in patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer," says principal investigator Tyler Curiel, professor of medicine and chief of hematology and medical oncology at Tulane. "When a patient has cancer, some of the immune cells in the body begin to kill the body's tumor-killing immune cells instead of killing the tumor. So it's like friendly fire -- soldiers, instead of going out and shooting the enemy, shoot their own soldiers instead."

In the journal Nature Medicine, Tulane scientists reported how Tregs impede the body's ability to fight ovarian cancer. The Tulane research team showed that human tumor Treg cells suppress tumor immunity and contribute to growth of tumors. Thus, killing Treg cells may help treat cancer, Curiel says.

The National Cancer Institute awarded a four-year grant of more than $1.2 million for the Tulane team to continue studying how ovarian tumors undermine immunity and continue to grow. The Tulane team hopes this novel treatment approach, using Ontak to deplete Tregs, will prove beneficial not only for ovarian cancer, but also for other cancers in future studies, including breast and lung cancer, Curiel says.



Publication: Nature Medicine
On the web: Tulane University 

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 Additional information about the news article
Ontak has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of patients with cutaneous T-cell leukemia/lymphoma.
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