More Information
Jehovah-Tsidkenu
"Our Righteousness"
Medical Information
It is not our place to endorse or discredit a specific treatment/procedure or clinic nor state that any specific treatment is the answer. BUT, we are willing to share information as it becomes available. It is strongly encouraged that those persons researching these treatments, trials or clinics consult a neuro-oncologist and explore all avenues prior to making any decision.
Posted 6 March 07
http://www.depmed.ualberta.ca/dca/ in regards to this possible trail opening, please further read http://www.cancer.org/aspx/blog/Comments.aspx?id=130
http://bethesdatrials.cancer.gov/clinical-research/search_detail.asp?ProtocolID=NCI-02-C-0193
Posted on
September 27, 2006 at 9:30 a.m.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - UAB (University of Alabama at Birmingham) researchers are
investigating whether a common but usually harmless virus can be used to treat a
particularly devastating type of brain tumor called malignant glioma. The virus
— respiratory enteric orphan virus, or reovirus — inhabits the lungs and
intestines of humans. By adulthood, most humans have been exposed to it but
demonstrate no illness or effects from the infection.
When the virus is introduced directly to malignant glioma cells however, it
appears to be able to infect the malignant cell and then replicate, killing the
cell.
“Healthy, non-cancerous cells in our bodies have the ability to prevent reovirus
from replicating, so that even if we are infected with the virus we do not
usually exhibit significant symptoms,” said James M. Markert, M.D., professor
and director of the UAB division of neurosurgery and principal investigator of
the trial. “But brain tumor cells do not have that protection, due to a mutation
in their DNA. The reovirus replicates, destroying the tumor cell, and the
replicated virus goes in search of new tumor cells to infect.”
About half of the 17,000 brain tumors diagnosed in the Unites States each year
are malignant glioma, the most severe form of brain tumor. Survival rates are
very poor, with as few as 10 percent of patients living for two years.
UAB is currently the only site participating in this Phase I/II trial sponsored
by a Canadian biomedical company, Oncolytics Biotech Inc., using their
proprietary formulation of human reovirus called REOLYSIN®.
“The main purpose of the Phase I portion of the study is to determine whether
the virus is safe.” said Markert. “Previous studies give us reason to believe it
will be well-tolerated without negative side effects.”
Two catheters are placed in a tumor mass during a stereotactic brain surgery
procedure. The reovirus is then infused through the catheters over the course of
three days. MRI imaging will be used to determine whether the tumor mass shrinks
over time, indicating that the virus is destroying tumor cells.
Markert said the trial will also examine whether the virus will be effective
against glioma cells that have begun to spread away from the primary tumor.
Glioma cells can break away from a tumor mass and migrate to other parts of the
brain, traveling along nerve transmission lines called axons. Markert said there
is evidence that reovirus, when infused slowly over several days, may have the
same ability to travel via nerve axons, allowing the virus to pursue and destroy
glioma cells away from the tumor mass itself.
UAB plans to enroll 15 people with recurrent malignant glioma in the Phase I
portion of the trial.
www.oncolyticsbiotech.com
Transmolecular, Inc. - Scorpion Venom
Cedars-Sinai - Overcoming Immune Privilege
About Kid's Health - Brain Tumors (place the mouse over the images for a better understanding)
Children's Hospital - Birmingham
University of Alabama - Birmingham
Childhood Brain Tumor - Gliomas
Support
Songs Of Love - The Medicine of Music
Brain Tumor Foundation for Children
JJ in the News