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Immune-Based Therapy May Help Some Battling Advanced Colon Cancers
  • Robert Preidt
  • Posted August 11, 2021

Immune-Based Therapy May Help Some Battling Advanced Colon Cancers

Immunotherapy helped extend the lives of some patients with the most common type of advanced colon cancer, researchers report.

The new findings are important, they noted, because immunotherapy doesn't typically work against microsatellite stable (MSS) colon cancer. These patients have few treatment options once their disease no longer responds to chemotherapy.

This study included 95 patients with MSS colon cancer that had become resistant to chemo and had spread. They were treated with what is known as immune checkpoint inhibitor PD-1/PD-L1 targeted therapy. It helps the immune system recognize and attack cancerous cells.

"To our knowledge, this is the largest study to evaluate the impact of PD-1/PD-L1 targeting on patient response as stratified by site of metastatic disease," said researcher Dr. Marwan Fakih, co-director of the Gastrointestinal Cancer Program and director of clinical research at the City of Hope in California.

The median time of disease progression for patients whose cancer had not spread to the liver was four months, compared to one and a half months for those whose cancer had spread to the liver, the study found. (Median means half spread faster, half took longer.)

The study was published Aug. 9 in the journal JAMA Network Open.

"When we stratified the patients by the presence or absence of liver metastases, we noted that about 20% of patients without liver metastases had a major response to anti-PD-1 or anti-PD-L1 therapy," Fakih said in a City of Hope news release. None of the patients whose cancer had spread to the liver had a positive response, he added.

"Patients without liver metastases could benefit from immunotherapy considerably more than patients with liver metastases," he added.

Colon cancer is the third most common cancer and leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

MSS colon cancer accounts for 95% of colon cancers that spread.

More information

The American Cancer Society has more on colon cancer.

SOURCE: City of Hope, news release, Aug. 9, 2021

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