Tagged: cancer

3:53pm

Tue January 24, 2012
Health

Buffalo's Roswell Park to test cancer fighting vaccine

A vaccine pairing dendritic cells (above) with a specialized protein has shown promise in treating cancer and preventing relapses, in pre-clinical trials.
AJC1 / via Flickr

Can a vaccine treat cancer?

That’s the question behind new clinical tests, soon to begin at Buffalo’s Roswell Park Cancer Institute.

The medicine in question is not your average vaccine: Each dose is customized for each cancer patient.

Researchers will draw healthy cells from each study participant, attach a specialized protein in a sterile lab environment and then inject the mixture, now known as a dendritic cell vaccine, back into the body.

“You can see that these cells now come back. They have memory. They’re able to remember that cancer cells are bad. They need to be destroyed. They need to be killed,” says Kunle Odunsi, chair of the Department of Gynecologic Oncology.

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4:25pm

Fri May 20, 2011
Health

Study: Tobacco industry circumvents new FDA rules, misleads public

While minor changes like the ban of words like "light" and "mild" went into effect last summer, more conspicuous on-box attempts to curb smoking will start showing up over the next few years.
Food and Drug Adminstration / Courtesy photo

About a year ago, cigarette packs changed again. Terms like “light,” “low” and “mild” were banned by the Food and Drug Administration.

Now, studies at Roswell Park Cancer Institute are showing tobacco companies are finding ways around the new restrictions.

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4:36pm

Wed February 23, 2011
Health

Prostate cancer vaccine now available at Buffalo hospital

The Roswell Park Cancer Institute is now offering the first-ever vaccine to treat cancer.

But the drug – Provenge – isn’t for everyone. Only men with advanced prostate cancer can receive the treatment, and only after a lengthy approval process by hospital officials. 

How it works
Provenge isn't a traditional vaccine.  Doctors take blood from a patient and purify it to find cells that are naturally immune. Using those cells, and the Provenge formula, Roswell doctors can craft a customized vaccine for each cancer patient.

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