An mRNA vaccine tested by BioNTech shows early promise against pancreatic cancer

bnew

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A small study on personalised mRNA vaccines for pancreatic cancer patients has shown promising results. - Copyright Canva


By Giulia Carbonaro • Updated: 15/05/2023 - 08:13

Pancreatic cancer is one of the most stubborn and deadliest types of cancer. Could tailored mRNA vaccines help the immune system fight it off?

An mRNA vaccine for pancreatic cancer patients has shown promising results in a small study conducted by New York researchers and Germany’s BioNTech, staving off the return of the tumour in half of those treated.

Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest forms of cancer around, estimated to kill 88 per cent of patients. It’s also one of the most virulent cancers: the disease is known to quickly return even after a patient has successfully removed it. About 90 per cent of patients experience a relapse within seven to nine months after surgery.

But a targeted mRNA vaccine could offer some hope. This week, a group of scientists at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Center in New York published in the journal Nature the results of a small study they conducted on pancreatic cancer patients over several years.

The study used a pancreatic cancer mRNA vaccine tailored to each patient’s tumour to potentially help provoke an immune response.

What’s revolutionary about the vaccines tested by the scientists in Germany is that they tailored them to the mutated proteins found on the surface of cancer cells - rather than a mix of tumour and normal cells, as it’s been tried for decades.

The cells were extracted from patients’ tumours by researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering (MSK) Cancer Center in New York and sent to BioNTech - the German company that created the highly effective COVID-19 vaccine with Pfizer.

The scientists then personalised the vaccine to the immune system of each of the 16 patients involved in the study, which began in December 2019. All patients were white. The patients were given the vaccine together with chemotherapy and a drug which is targeted at keeping tumours from evading a patient’s immune system’s response.

Half of the patients who were administered the vaccine responded: their immune systems learned how to recognise and fight off the cancer cells, and for the 18 months they were tracked they showed no signs of relapse.

Exciting results

“These exciting results indicate we may be able to use vaccines as a therapy against pancreatic cancer,” MSK doctor and cancer specialist Vinod P. Balachandran, who led the research, said in a statement. “The evidence supports our strategy to tailor each vaccine to each patient’s tumour”.

For the eight other patients who did not appear to respond to the vaccine, cancer returned after about 13 months after they had removal surgery. Only two did not see their cancer return.

Unfortunately, the scientists could not completely rule out that other factors, besides the vaccine, might have contributed to a patient producing an immune response. But researchers suspect that the vaccine was more successful in patients who had their spleen still intact: out of seven participants in the study who had their spleen removed, five did not respond to the vaccine.

While promising, personalised mRNA cancer vaccines are still in their infancy. This type of vaccine is still too costly to be broadly used, and by definition cannot be manufactured in large batches.

But the results of the recent study suggest that researchers are on the right track to treat pancreatic cancers and potentially other types of aggressive tumours.

Going forward, MSK researchers are planning to start a larger, randomised clinical trial at multiple sites in various countries. Patients will be enrolled starting this summer.

“It’s exciting to see that a personalised vaccine could enlist the immune system to fight pancreatic cancer - which urgently needs better treatments,” Balachandran said.

“It’s also motivating as we may be able to use such personalised vaccines to treat other deadly cancers”.
 

Json

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Wonder if the same anti-vaxx bozos will be against this too. :unimpressed:
If God didn’t want them to have pancreatic cancer he wouldn’t have given them a pancreas.


So keep your genetic tracking, genome changing mRNA “vaccines” for your liberal elites!
 

bnew

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I had a problem with the covid vaccine because it was a 9 month rush job. And if people weren't being a$$holes and using "muh freedums" as an excuse for poor behavior, it wouldn't have been as necessary as it was.
covid is the most researched virus/disease on the planet.




you seem more concerned about spike proteins in vaccines than covid w/ spike proteins. covid is demonstrably something to be more concerned about than the vaccine.


over 2 billions shots and safer than an advil.:ehh:
 

bnew

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Less than a year of research and then got put out for public consumption. Vaccine research normally takes far longer.
:ufdup:

I had to come to work every day and never got COVID. In fact, I stayed 6 feet away and wore a mask. :ufdup:

So no. I'm not the problem. :umad:

it seems you don't understand why MRNA vaccines are revolutionary, it's the immune system that does most of the work, immune system makes the antibodies after instructions to create spike proteins are carried out and is detected..

MRNA vaccines have been studied for almost 2 decades and I think the only big thing that was missing was a delivery system(lipid) that wouldn't dissolve so quickly. covid kicked things into high gear and the most cooperative scientific development in human history took place. they literally built the digital infrastructure as they were going along to share information faster.
 
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Regular_P

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Bboystyle

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Less than a year of research and then got put out for public consumption. Vaccine research normally takes far longer.
:ufdup:

I had to come to work every day and never got COVID. In fact, I stayed 6 feet away and wore a mask. :ufdup:

So no. I'm not the problem. :umad:
I love morons like you. Less than a year of research? U need to know that corona virus has been known and out for years prior to the pandemic. Its been apart of the SARs family for decades. This isnt some new found virus that came out. Its a new strain. They had basis and foundations to find a vaccine just like how the yearly flu vaccine is developed every year. But u dont see anyone crying about the flu vaccine being rushed on a yearly basis because it doesnt fit yall agenda :sas1:
 

Payday23

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I had a problem with the covid vaccine because it was a 9 month rush job. And if people weren't being a$$holes and using "muh freedums" as an excuse for poor behavior, it wouldn't have been as necessary as it was.
The fact that you think it should take years for a drug to hit the market shows the FDA propaganda works
 

Payday23

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I had a problem with the covid vaccine because it was a 9 month rush job. And if people weren't being a$$holes and using "muh freedums" as an excuse for poor behavior, it wouldn't have been as necessary as it was.
The fact that you think it should take years for a drug to hit the market shows the FDA propaganda works
 

Secure Da Bag

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I love morons like you. Less than a year of research? U need to know that corona virus has been known and out for years prior to the pandemic. Its been apart of the SARs family for decades. This isnt some new found virus that came out. Its a new strain. They had basis and foundations to find a vaccine just like how the yearly flu vaccine is developed every year. But u dont see anyone crying about the flu vaccine being rushed on a yearly basis because it doesnt fit yall agenda :sas1:

You need to know what you're talking about. I said COVID-19 not coronavirus. Let me put it a different way. I said square not parallelogram. We're talking about a vaccine for a specific strain of a virus. That no one had an answer for. Flu vaccines are made the traditional way not using mRNA like the COVID-19 vaccine was. mRNA vaccine for COVID-19 had less than a year of testing. If you think the flu vaccine and the COVID-19 vaccine are the same, then you are in fact far too ignorant to be having this conversation.

For your own information, so at least next time you speak, it'll be factual and not a convoluted mess of misinformation.
 
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