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						 Gilead's 
						new drug keeps 56 percent of lymphoma trial patients 
						alive 
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		[December 11, 2017] By 
		Deena Beasley 
		(Reuters) - More than half of trial 
		patients with an advanced, aggressive form of blood cancer lived for at 
		least a year after one-time treatment with Yescarta, a novel therapy 
		sold by Gilead Sciences Inc, according to study results presented on 
		Sunday. | 
        
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			 Yescarta, approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 
			October for aggressive large B-cell lymphoma that did not respond to 
			other treatments, is part of a new class known as chimeric antigen 
			receptor T-cell therapies, or CAR-Ts, designed to reprogram the 
			body's own immune cells to recognize and attack malignant cells. 
 Follow-up on 108 patients treated with Yescarta showed that 42 
			percent remained in remission after a median of 15 months, and 56 
			percent were still alive, according to research presented in Orlando 
			at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
 
 "This is an extremely valuable therapy for some patients who have no 
			other options," said Dr Frederick Locke, vice chair of the 
			department of blood and marrow transplant and cellular immunotherapy 
			at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida and the trial's co-lead 
			investigator.
 
 He said patients who achieve remission after receiving Yescarta tend 
			to stay in remission, but more work needs to be done to determine 
			why some do not respond to the cell therapy.
 
 After analyzing tumor tissue from before and after treatment in 
			patients who relapsed, the researchers found that in a third of 
			patients the CD19 protein targeted by Yescarta was no longer present 
			on cancer cells. Also, more than two-thirds of tumors showed 
			evidence of another protein, PDL1, likely helping the cancer cells 
			survive.
 
			
			 
			
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			Gilead is also studying Yescarta in combination with a PDL1 
			antibody, Roche Holding AG's Tecentriq, and results from an 
			early-stage trial of that combination will be announced at ASH on 
			Monday. 
			
			 
			Gilead acquired Yescarta, which has a U.S. list price of $373,000, 
			with its buyout earlier this year of Kite Pharmaceuticals.
 (Reporting by Deena Beasley; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
 
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