DELIVERING HEALTH INFORMATION
YOU CAN TRUST SINCE 1989
Join the enews community - Terms
MEMBER
MENU
Filter by Categories
Blog
General
Lifestyle

Immunotherapy a cancer game changer? Curb the enthusiasm

Reading time: 1 minute

For one, those given the immunotherapy drug nivolumab did live longer than others who had chemotherapy – but only by a few months. In the new study involving 350 patients with head and neck cancer, 36 per cent of the immunotherapy patients were still alive a year later, which also means that 64 per cent weren’t helped by the drug, compared to 17 per cent of patients given chemotherapy.

The results were slightly better among patients who were also HPV-positive; they lived an average of nine months, which was slightly more than double the survival time with chemotherapy, say researchers from the Royal Marsden Hospital in London.

While any extension of life is welcome, does it make immunotherapy a game changer? An analysis of the new therapy in September’s What Doctors Don’t Tell You magazine (https://www.wddty.com/magazine/2016/september/immunotherapy-hype-or-hope.html) discovered that drug company profits were as much to do with the zeal surrounding immunotherapy as any benefit to the patient. Bad news was also being swept under the carpet by the drug company and regulators; one immunotherapy drug had been responsible for five deaths – which was 25 per cent of those given the treatment – and two further deaths in 2014.

(Source: proceedings of the European Cancer Congress, October 9, 2016)

What do you think? Start a conversation over on the... WDDTY Community

Article Topics: game, hospital, patient, Physician
  • Recent Posts

  • Copyright © 1989 - 2024 WDDTY
    Publishing Registered Office Address: Hill Place House, 55a High Street Wimbledon, London SW19 5BA
    Skip to content