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Will cancer ever be
cured? Recent results leave many in doubt
Not long ago, the defeat of cancer seemed inevitable. Decades
of research would soon pay off with a completely fresh
approach, an arsenal of clever new drugs to attack the very
forces that make tumors grow and spread and kill.
No more chemotherapy, the thinking went. No
more horrid side effects. Just brilliantly designed drugs that stop
cancer while leaving everything else untouched.
Those elegant drugs are now here. But so is
cancer.
The approach, which appeared so
straightforward, has proven disappointingly difficult to turn into
broadly useful treatments. Some now wonder if malignancy will ever
be reliably and predictably cured.
The dearth of substantial impact so far
suggests the fight against cancer will continue to be a tedious
slog, and victories will be scored in weeks or months of extra life,
not years. The full potential of the new approach may take decades
to be realized.
The drugs, called targeted therapies, are
intended to arrest cancer by disrupting the internal signals that
fuel its unruly growth. Unlike chemo, which attacks all dividing
cells, these medicines are crafted with pinpoint accuracy to go
after the genetically controlled irregularities that make cancer
unique.
Several have made it through testing, but
despite their apparent bull's-eye hits, lasting results are rare.
Instead, these new drugs turn out to be about as effective or as
powerless as old-line chemotherapy. Aimed at the major forms of
cancer, they work spectacularly for a lucky few and modestly for
some.
But for most? Not at all.
Doctors have many theories about what's gone
wrong. But it is clear that cancer is a surprisingly robust foe,
packed with convoluted backup systems that kick in when threatened
by the new drugs.
At best, experts now expect knocking down
cancer will require an elaborate mixture of targeted drugs,
assembled to match the distinct biology of each person's cancer.
"It's a much more complicated problem than
anyone ever appreciated," says Dr. Leonard Saltz, a colon cancer
expert at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. "It will,
unfortunately, be with us for a long time."
The job is so daunting, especially for
advanced cancers propelled by potentially dozens of nefarious
genetic mutations, that scientists are even rethinking the goal of
cancer research.
"Society as a whole, and most of the medical
profession, have it wrong understanding we'll wake up one morning
and find out cancer is cured. It won't happen. The public should
give it up," says Dr. Craig Henderson, a breast cancer specialist at
the University of California, San Francisco, and president of Access
Oncology, a drug developer.
"What we have learned by these billions of
dollars invested in cancer biology is that cancer are us," he goes
on. True, cancer is different. But not different enough. "Identify
what makes cancer unique and wipe it out? That won't happen. We
cannot wipe out the cancer without wiping out a lot of the rest of
us."
Henderson and many others have shifted their
sights to something less converting cancer into a chronic disease,
like diabetes or AIDS. Treatments might slow or even stop its worst
effects so people survive for years reasonably free of symptoms.
Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach, head of the
National Cancer Institute, argues that a cure is not even necessary
if this can be done, something he optimistically hopes to see by
2015. But eliminate cancer? "Not in the foreseeable future," he
says. (Related site: von Eschenbach's interview
Still, experts concede there is no firm
evidence that targeted treatments will tame cancer to a chronic
condition, either. Certainly, the ones tested so far do not often
come close to this for the common varieties, such as lung, breast,
colon and prostate cancer.
Although targeted therapies have their
origins in basic cancer discoveries of the 1980s, the story for many
began at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in
1998. Researchers were thrilled to hear of the first convincing
demonstration that a targeted drug could slow the course of cancer
even a little. It was proof that the principle is sound.
Usually wary oncologists rhapsodized about a
new era of treatment. "A tidal wave," one of them called it. Even
then, no one predicted quick cures. But they clearly felt they at
least had the key to getting inside cancer and fixing it.
The drug that caused the euphoria, Herceptin,
became a standard treatment for spreading breast cancer, typically
delaying progression by a few months in the quarter of victims with
a particular genetic profile.
Since Herceptin, targeted drugs have become
the prevailing approach in cancer research. Whenever any of these
make slight progress, the news is widely and sometimes breathlessly
reported. An estimated two-thirds of the nearly 400 cancer medicines
in human study take this tack. Yet researchers do not envision
successes any more spectacular from this pipeline than the modest
effects of the handful already on the market.
"Right now, in the short run, we can bring an
occasional miracle and have an overall small benefit," says Dr. John
Glaspy, medical director of UCLA's surgical oncology center. "But
there has not been a major improvement on what happens to them
ultimately."
Furthermore, the dream of abandoning
chemotherapy has largely evaporated. Even the targeted drugs' small
benefits are typically seen only when combined with standard chemo.
Cancer doctors facing waiting rooms full of
dying cancer patients, with little to offer but easing misery and
perhaps a few extra months of survival, clearly had wished for more.
"The hope was that these targeted therapies
would be the new magic bullet and would cure cancer," says Dr. David
Decker, an oncologist at William Beaumont Hospital outside Detroit.
"It's fair to say they haven't panned out the way we thought they
would."
The targeted drugs have been most impressive
against cancers of the blood and immune system, which are easier to
control than the more common organ tumors. For instance, about half
of patients getting Rituxan for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma have at least
a 50% reduction in their cancer, and the improvement lasts an
average of a year before the disease progresses again.
The one striking success, Gleevec,
unfortunately works only against two rare blood and digestive
cancers that involve unusually simple signaling pathways, offering
ideal targets. Even so, Gleevec's stunning effects close to 90%
initially get better often wear off in time.
In 2001, Dean Gordanier, a Boston tax
attorney with a cancer-swollen belly, was "pretty much dying" when
he started on Gleevec. For 18 months, it was a miracle. He gained
weight and went back to work. Then, the day before Christmas, he
learned the tumor was growing again.
For most who win a cancer reprieve, that
would be the end. But as it turned out, another experimental
targeted drug was available at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and
Gordanier's cancer is in retreat again, although he expects this
medicine, too, will eventually fail.
"I feel like I'm riding the crest of a wave,"
he says. "It could dump me at any time, but right now I'm cruising."
Dr. Brian Druker of Oregon Health and
Sciences University, one of Gleevec's developers, says, "What
Gleevec tells us is if we have the right target and the right drug,
we will have spectacular results. Until then, we will be mired in
incremental gains."
Those gains seem especially incremental
against the far more complicated common cancers. For instance, the
drug Iressa was approved in May on evidence that it temporarily
shrinks advanced lung cancer in just 10% of patients. Doctors often
assume drugs will work better if given earlier in the disease. But
when Iressa was combined with chemotherapy in newly diagnosed lung
cancer, the patients did not respond to it at all.
Others in the pipeline seem hardly more
potent.
At this June's clinical oncology meeting,
doctors reported the results with two targeted drugs for advanced
colon cancer: A growth signal blocker called Erbitux (the same
medicine that ensnarled Martha Stewart in a Wall Street scandal)
temporarily shrank tumors in a quarter of patients. And Avastin,
intended to stop cancers from building blood vessels, improved
average survival by four months.
In theory, all of these drugs should work
better, because they block the communication pathways hijacked by
the genetic mutations that become cancer.
Cancer occurs when five to 10 ordinary genes
develop mutations in a single cell over a person's lifetime, the
consequence of biological insults like smoking or just bad luck. As
a result, the genes may get stuck in hyperdrive, churning out huge
amounts of growth-stimulating proteins, or perhaps they get turned
off inappropriately, robbing cells of their brakes. Whatever the
problem, the result is cells that divide over and over; that take
root in parts of the body where they don't belong; that lose the
normal instinct to self-destruct when their wiring goes awry; and
that they simply never die.
This mess is fueled by hundreds, even
thousands, of individual proteins. The process of making new blood
vessels alone may entail 30 or 40 of them lined up in several
signaling pathways.
With targeted drugs, scientists envisioned
bringing the entire process to a halt by chemically knocking out a
single protein link in one chain of communication. Like a cut phone
line, no signal gets through. Therefore, no more growth and no new
cancer.
Although the process has not worked out to be
this simple, many in the field believe that eventual progress is
likely. Maybe the best-case scenario is spun out by Dr. William
Kaelin of the Farber Institute. He theorizes that a few key pathways
will prove important in many kinds of cancer, and drugs will be
created to effectively block them.
Several dozen drugs may offer enough choices
to cover all the typical genetic combinations at work in cancer.
"This is the belief that is driving all of us," says Kaelin. With
the right mix of three or four drugs for any individual, "we will
make a major inroad into the common adult tumors, such as lung,
colon and breast cancer."
Though they hoped for more, many cancer
specialists seem relieved for now to have anything new to offer at
all. Even small advances are welcome in a profession where progress
often seems glacial.
"It is slower progress than we'd like, but
that's the nature of medicine," says Dr. Donald Trump, chairman of
medicine at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo "A disease
process as complex as cancer is unlikely to yield to blockbuster
effects."
Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed.
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