<code id='FD6601D9C2'></code><style id='FD6601D9C2'></style>
    • <acronym id='FD6601D9C2'></acronym>
      <center id='FD6601D9C2'><center id='FD6601D9C2'><tfoot id='FD6601D9C2'></tfoot></center><abbr id='FD6601D9C2'><dir id='FD6601D9C2'><tfoot id='FD6601D9C2'></tfoot><noframes id='FD6601D9C2'>

    • <optgroup id='FD6601D9C2'><strike id='FD6601D9C2'><sup id='FD6601D9C2'></sup></strike><code id='FD6601D9C2'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='FD6601D9C2'><label id='FD6601D9C2'><select id='FD6601D9C2'><dt id='FD6601D9C2'><span id='FD6601D9C2'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='FD6601D9C2'></u>
          <i id='FD6601D9C2'><strike id='FD6601D9C2'><tt id='FD6601D9C2'><pre id='FD6601D9C2'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          entertainment

          entertainment

          author:hotspot    Page View:3296
          The ability of cancer cells to move and spread depends on actin-rich core structures such as the podosomes (yellow) shown here in melanoma cells. Cell nuclei (blue), actin (red), and an actin regulator (green) are also shown.
          Metastatic melanoma cells Julio C. Valencia,/NCI Center for Cancer Research

          Nearly four decades after its first conception, the first TIL therapy, an immunotherapy that harvests cancer-fighting immune cells from the patient’s own body, received accelerated approval from the Food and Drug Administration for advanced melanoma. The therapy, called Amtagvi or lifileucel from Iovance, is the first cell therapy approved for a solid tumor.

          “It’s so exciting and gratifying,” said Allison Betof Warner, a cell therapy researcher and physician at Stanford University who has worked on Amtagvi. “This is a game-changing moment for our field. We’ve seen huge success of cellular therapy for hematologic malignancies, and we’ve yet to capitalize on that for solid tumors. This is hopefully the first of many to come.”

          advertisement

          In a Phase 2 clinical trial, titled C-144-01, 153 patients who had already been on a median of three prior lines of therapy received lifileucel, and 31% of them responded to therapy. “These are in very late line patients. They’ve exhausted every standard care option,” Betof Warner said. “The most promising part of this therapy for me is that 42% of patients who responded were still responding for 18 months or longer. It’s truly incredible.”

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          focus

          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap
          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap

          Screenshotviacallingbullshit.orgTiredofalternativefacts,fakenews,andbreathlesshyperbole,twoprofessor

          read more
          Scientists unlock the key to scar
          Scientists unlock the key to scar

          Confocalmicrographofaprimaryhumanfibroblastcellsgrowninculturestainedforactin,ahighlyabundantprotein

          read more
          Moonlake's readout produced a cash windfall. Risks remain
          Moonlake's readout produced a cash windfall. Risks remain

          MollyFerguson/STATFortwodaysstartingonSunday,MoonlakeImmunotherapeuticshappilycrunchednumbersandshar

          read more

          ‘Oppenheimer’ and the risks of AI in health care

          APAllgreatstorieshavecomplicatedendings.Butthatdoesn’tmeantheycan’toffersimpleandinstructivelessons.