Search
Powered By HealthLine
Special Offers
Health Tools
 Heart Healthy Diet
 Ideal Body Weight Calculator
 Diet Reviews
 Fitness and Family
 Quiz: Test Your Fitness IQ
 Exercise and Fitness Guide
 Eat Out Smart
 Healthy Cooking
 BMI Calculator
Featured Conditions
 Diet & Exercise
 Stop Smoking
 Food & Fitness
 High Blood Pressure
 Cholesterol
 Heart
Resources
Healthscout News
3D Health Animations
Health Videos
Quizzes & Tools
Health Encyclopedia
In-Depth Reports
Library & Communities
News Archive
Drug Library
Find a Therapist
Enter City or Zip Code:
Powered by Psychology Today
PR Newswire
 Read latest







Channels
Home |  Today | Women| Men| Kids| Seniors| Diseases| Addictions| Sex & Relationships| Diet, Fitness, Looks| Alternative Medicine| Drug Checker
 Printer Friendly  Send to a Friend

Study Suggests Way to 'Mop Up' Leukemia Cells

Vaccine beats back cancer left behind after treatment, researchers say


Related Encyclopedia
 border=
Adenocarcinoma of the Lung and Brain Metastases
Basal Cell Carcinoma
Bladder Cancer
Bone Cancer
More...

Related Healthscout Videos
 border=
Growing Lungs in the Lab: Medicine's Next Big Thing?
From Belly to Breast: Rebuilding After Cancer
Shaving off Cancer
Fluorescent Medicine for Brain Tumors
More...

Related Animations
 border=
Breast Self-Exam Video
Colon Cancer
More...

Related Drug Information
 border=
Epogen
Iressa
Procrit
Topamax
More...

Related News Articles
 border=
Recurrence of Oral Cancer Found to Signal Poor Outcome
Gene Mutation Suggests New Treatment Target for Specific Lymphoma
Cancer Cells May Be Able to Urge Their Own Death
Gene Mutation Found in One of Four Cases of Deadly Brain Cancers
More...

FRIDAY, Jan. 8 (HealthDay News) -- Preliminary research suggests that a vaccine could help reduce the risk of a relapse in some people who take the drug Gleevec to treat chronic myeloid leukemia.

"Should this vaccine approach prove to be successful, the ability to get patients off lifelong Gleevec therapy would be a significant advance," Dr. Hyam Levitsky, a professor of oncology, medicine and urology at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center in Baltimore, said in a news release from the center.

Text Continues Below



Imatinib mesylate (Gleevec) treats chronic myeloid leukemia, but can leave some cancerous cells behind. They can cause a relapse.

Researchers from the cancer center tested a vaccine on 19 people who had cancerous cells even though they'd taken Gleevec for a year. After about 72 months, the number of cancer cells had declined in 13 people. In seven, the cancer had vanished. Reported side effects of the treatment were relatively rare.

But it's not clear if the results were actually caused by the vaccine, the researchers said, because of the small number of participants and the lack of comparison with other treatments.

"We want to get rid of every last cancer cell in the body," Levitsky said, "and using cancer vaccines may be a good way to mop up residual disease."

The vaccine was made from cancer cells that were blasted with radiation to stop them from being cancerous, the researchers said.

The research, funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, was published in the Jan. 1 issue of Clinical Cancer Research.

More information

The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more on Gleevec.



-- Randy Dotinga

Copyright © 2010 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 1/8/2010

Related Links
 border=
From Healthscout's partner site on breast cancer, MyBreastCancerNetwork.com
VIDEO: Chemo booster cuts treatment time by two months
SYMPTOMS: Learn what to look for and what the symptoms mean
PROGNOSIS: Early detection and new treatments improve survival rates





SOURCE: Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, news release, Jan. 6, 2010


HealthScout is a part of HealthCentral
About Us   Our Blog   Contact Us   Privacy Policy   Terms of Use   Site Map  
Copyright © 2001-2010. The HealthCentralNetwork, Inc. All rights reserved.
Advertising Policy   Editorial Policy Advertise With Us   Anti-Spam Policy   PR Newswire