For
25 years, Cuba worked on developing a vaccine for lung cancer, and 2011
saw the availability of CimaVax, which prevents against a growth factor
that can cause tumor cells to grow. In the video below, learn about the
cheap vaccine, how it was made available for free in Cuba and why the
U.S. wants in on it.
"So
far, 5,000 patients worldwide have been treated with CimaVax,
including 1,000 patients in Cuba. Lee said the latest Cuban study of
405 patients, which has not yet been published, confirms earlier
findings about the safety and efficacy of the vaccine. What's more, the
shot is cheap -- each costs the Cuban government just $1, Wired
reported. Studies have found there are no significant side effects."
Watch Video after cut
President
Barack Obama will become the first president to visit Cuba in almost
90 years when he and first lady Michelle Obama travel to the island
nation on March 21. But one of the most exciting things about the
thawing of relations between Cuba and the U.S. is happening stateside
right now: the possibility of clinical trials on a drug to prevent lung
cancer, and possibly other cancers, too.
CimaVax, which is both a
treatment and vaccine for lung cancer, has been researched in Cuba for
25 years and free to the Cuban public since 2011. New York Governor
Andrew Cuomo’s trade mission to Cuba in April 2015 resulted in a signed
agreement to bring CimaVax to the U.S., but as with all international
drugs and treatments, U.S. researchers need to conduct clinical trials
and replicate international scientists’ results before it becomes
available to the American public.
"We’re still at the very early
stages of assessing the promise of this vaccine, but the evidence so
far from clinical trials in Cuba and Europe has been striking," said
Dr. Kelvin Lee, Jacobs Family Chair in Immunology and co-leader of the
Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy Program at Roswell Park Cancer
Institute in Buffalo, New York, the research center that is evaluating
CimaVax for U.S. use.
The hoped-for success of CimaVax
availability in the U.S. is just one example of the possibilities that
come with open trade between the two nations. When Obama loosened the
United State's 55-year trade embargo against Cuba in December, he
allowed for such joint research deals to be finalized. Similar programs
might have been impossible just a few years ago.
"You never know
how long these things would take," said Candace Johnson, CEO of
Roswell Park. "We would have loved to have had this already started
because we’ve been working on this for quite a while, but we’re
persistent and we’ll get it done."
Cuba has long been known for
its high-quality cigars, and lung cancer is a major public health
problem and the fourth-leading cause of death in the country. A 2007
study of patients with stages IIIB and IV lung cancer, published in the
Journal of Clinical Oncology, confirmed the safety of the CimaVax and
showed an increase in tumor-reducing antibody production in more than
half of cases. It proved particularly effective for increased survival
if the study participant was younger than 60.
So far, 5,000
patients worldwide have been treated with CimaVax, including 1,000
patients in Cuba. Lee said the latest Cuban study of 405 patients,
which has not yet been published, confirms earlier findings about the
safety and efficacy of the vaccine. What's more, the shot is cheap --
each costs the Cuban government just $1, Wired reported. Studies have
found there are no significant side effects.
"We think it may be
an effective way to prevent cancer from developing or recurring, so
that’s where a lot of our team’s excitement comes in," Lee said.
"There’s good reason to believe that this vaccine may be effective in
both treating and preventing several types of cancer, including not
only lung but breast, colorectal, head-and-neck, prostate and ovarian
cancers, so the potential positive impact of this approach could be
enormous."
How it works
CimaVax induces
people to build antibodies against a certain growth factor that cancer
cells make. For people who already have lung cancer, this response
results in the body actually getting rid of the cancer cells. And for
people who are currently healthy but at high risk for lung cancer --
say, a lung cancer patient in remission -- the treatment acts as a
vaccine to prevent future relapse. Johnson envisions that it could one
day be a standard preventive vaccine that a person gets in childhood,
much like the way we get vaccinated against polio, measles, mumps and
rubella.
In addition to CimaVax, Roswell Park scientists are also
reviewing other vaccine approaches from researchers at Cuba’s Center of
Molecular Immunology (where CimaVax was invented) that could one day
help patients overcome brain and pancreas cancer, as well as blood
cancers like leukemia and lymphoma. While they aren’t as far along as
CimaVax, Johnson said she is excited for the possibility these other
treatments hold.
"They are a very innovative group of scientists,
and they have vaccines and drugs that we think could play a very
significant role in our fight against cancer,” she said. "We’re
delighted to be working with them and we hope very soon that we can
start our trial on CimaVax -- hopefully the first of many clinical
trials to be done with some of these Cuban vaccine approaches."
To be clear, the CimaVax doesn't cure
cancer. It's a therapeutic vaccine that works by targeting the tumor
itself, specifically going after the proteins that allow a tumor to
keep growing. (And as PBS points out, a person can't just take a shot
of CimaVax and continue to smoke without fear of lung cancer.)
"We
hope to determine in the next few years whether giving CimaVax to
patients who’ve had a lung cancer removed, or maybe even to people at
high risk of developing lung or head-and-neck cancers because of a
history of heavy smoking, may be beneficial and may spare those people
from having a cancer diagnosis or recurrence," Lee said.
What needs to happen first
Roswell Park faces many bureaucratic hurdles before clinical trials for CimaVax actually begin.
Because
an embargo on Cuba is still in effect, Roswell Park had to apply for a
license from the Office of Foreign Assets Control at the Treasury
Department to bring CimaVax into the U.S. The license allows them to
use it for lab research, but not to give it out to patients, Johnson
explained.
Then, in order to start testing CimaVax on Americans,
Roswell Park has to get approval for a trial from the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration. Currently, Roswell Park and the FDA are
communicating about the design of the trial, Johnson said.
Once
the FDA signs off, Johnson has to submit the project to Roswell Park's
Scientific Review Committee to evaluate its scientific merit, as well
as their Institutional Review Board, a body that evaluates the ethical
aspects of any medical research involving human subjects. These two
final processes alone can take months to complete, Johnson said, and
she hopes to start on Phase 1 and II clinical trials, which assess the
effectiveness and safety of a drug, sometime in 2016. The entire
process, from start to finish, can take years to complete -- even when
the experimental drug was invented in the U.S.
To that end, the
United States is currently at work developing two lung cancer vaccines
of its own, GVAX and BLP 25, though neither has been studied for as long
as CimaVax.
Cuba's public health record
How
does a tiny island nation with limited economic resources pioneer a
powerhouse cancer vaccine? “They’ve had to do more with less,” Johnson
told Wired in May. "So they’ve had to be even more innovative with how
they approach things. For over 40 years, they have had a preeminent
immunology community.”
Despite decades of economic problems and
the U.S. trade embargo, Cuba has been a model of public health.
According the New York Times, life expectancy for Cubans is 79 years,
on par with the United States, despite the fact that its economy per
person is eight times smaller. While many drugs and even anesthesia
have been hard to come by over the years, Cuba has one of the best
doctor to patient ratios in the world. Moreover, the Cuban government's
investment in primary care for residents and preventative health
measures like public education, housing and nutrition have paid huge
dividends in the health of citizens, especially relative to similarly
poor countries.
Courtesy: Huffpo
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