A single-storey workshop on a nondescript business park in
Oxfordshire is not the sort of place where you would exect scientific
revolutions to take place. But behind the white-painted walls of this
small start-up company, scientists are talking about the impossible – a
potential cure for cancer.
For the past 20 years, the former academics who set up Immunocore
have worked hard on realising their dream of developing a totally new
approach to cancer treatment, and finally it looks as if their
endeavours are beginning to pay off. In the past three weeks, the
company has signed contracts with two of the biggest players in the
pharmaceuticals industry which could lead to hundreds of millions of
pounds flowing into the firm's unique research on cancer immunotherapy –
using the body's own immune system to fight tumour cells.
Immunocore
is probably the only company in the world that has developed a way of
harnessing the power of the immune system's natural-born killer cells:
the T-cells of the blood which nature has designed over millions of
years of evolution to seek out and kill invading pathogens, such as
viruses and bacteria. T-cells are not nearly as good at finding and
killing cancer cells, but the hard-nosed executives of the drugs
industry – who are notoriously cautious when it comes to investments –
believe Immunocore may have found a way around this so that cancer
patients in future are able to fend off their disease with their own
immune defences.
"Immunotherapy is radically different," said Bent
Jakobsen, the Danish-born chief scientific officer of Immunocore who
started to study T-cells 20 years ago while working at the Medical
Research Council's Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge. "It
doesn't do away with the other cancer treatments by any means, but it
adds something to the arsenal that has one unique feature – it may have
the potency to actually cure cancer," Dr Jakobsen said.
It is this
potency that has attracted the attention of Genentech in California,
owned by the Swiss giant Roche, and Britain's GlaxoSmithKline. Both
companies have independently signed deals with Immunocore that could
result in up to half a billion pounds being invested in new cancer
treatments based on its unique T-cell therapy.
It is no
understatement to say that cancer immunotherapy, or immuno-oncology as
it is technically called, represents a sea change in terms of cancer
treatment. Cancer in the past has been largely treated by slicing
(surgery), poisoning (chemotherapy) or burning (radiotherapy). All are
burdened with the inherent problem of how to spare healthy tissue from
irreparable damage while ensuring that every cancer cell is killed,
deactivated or removed.
Now there is another approach based on the
immune system, a complex web of cells, tissues and organs that
constantly strive to keep the body free of disease, which almost
certainly includes keeping cancerous cells in check.
For many
years, scientists have realised that the immune system plays a key role
in cancer prevention. There is ample evidence of this, not least from
patients who are immune-suppressed in some way – they are more likely
than other patients to develop cancer.
The immune system has two
basic ways of fighting invading pathogens and the body's own cells that
have gone awry. One involves the release of free-floating proteins, or
antibodies, that lock on to an invader, triggering other immune cells to
come in and sweep them away.
Many organisations have tried to
develop anti-cancer treatments based on antibodies, with limited
success, Dr Jakobsen said. Part of the problem is that antibodies are
not really designed to recognise cells. What Immunocore has done is to
build a therapy around the second arm of the immune system, known as
cellular immunity, where T-cells seek out and destroy invading
pathogens.
"There are a lot of companies working with antibodies
but we are virtually the only company in the world that has managed to
work with T-cells. It has taken 20 years and from that point we are
unique," Dr Jakobsen said.
Immunocore has found a way of designing
small protein molecules, which it calls ImmTACs, that effectively act
as double-ended glue. At one end they stick to cancer cells, strongly
and very specifically, leaving healthy cells untouched. At the other end
they stick to T-cells.
The technology is based on the "T-cell
receptor", the protein that sticks out of the surface of the T-cell and
binds to its enemy target. Immunocore's ImmTACs are effectively
independent T-cell receptors that are "bispecific", meaning they bind
strongly to cancer cells at one end, and T-cells at the other – so
introducing cancer cells to their nemesis.
"What we can do is to
use that scaffold of the T-cell receptor to make something that is very
good at recognising cancer even if it doesn't exist naturally," said Dr
Jakobsen. "Although T-cells are not very keen at recognising cancer, we
can force them to do so. The potential you have if you can engineer
T-cell receptors is quite enormous. You can find any type of cell and
any kind of target. This means the approach can in theory be used
against any cancer, whether it is tumours of the prostate, breast, liver
or the pancreas.
The key to the success of the technique is being
able to distinguish between a cancer cell and a normal, healthy cell.
Immunocore's drug does this by recognising small proteins or peptides
that stick out from the surface membrane of cancer cells. All cells
extrude peptides on their membranes and these peptides act like a shop
window, telling scientists what is going on within the cell, and whether
it is cancerous or not.
"All these little peptides tell you the
story of the cell. The forest of them on the cell surface is a sort of
display saying 'I am this kind of cell. This is my identity and this is
everything going on inside me'," Dr Jakobsen explained.
Immunocore
is building up a database of peptide targets on cancer cells in order
to design T-cell receptors that can target them, leaving healthy cells
alone and so minimising possible side effects – or that is the hope.
The
first phase clinical trial of the company's therapy, carried out on a
small number of patients in Britain and the United States with advanced
melanoma, has shown that people can tolerate the drug reasonably well
and preliminary results suggest there are "early signs of anti-tumour
activity", the company said.
A danger with deploying T-cells
against cancer is their potency. Yet it is this very potency that it is
so exciting because it could lead to a cure for metastatic disease that
has spread around the body, Dr Jakobsen said. "You can never make a
single-mechanism drug that would come anywhere near a T-cell in terms of
its potency.
"If you want to make an impact on cancer you need
something that is incredibly potent – but when something goes wrong, it
goes badly wrong. I think the honest truth about all cancer treatments
is that no matter how much we test and do beforehand, it will continue
to go wrong sometimes."
One infamous case of something going
disastrously wrong was a clinical trial in 2006 at Northwick Park
Hospital in London where scientists were testing a powerful
immuno-regulatory drug on six volunteers. All suffered serious side
effects caused by the overstimulation of their immune systems.
But
Dr Jakobsen said the clinical trial of Immunocore's T-cell drug, as
well as future trials, are inherently safe because they are based on
incremental rises in dose. All indications suggest it will lead to the
expected breakthrough.
He added: "All the pharma companies have
come to the realisation that immunotherapy may hold the ultimate key to
cancer; it is the missing link in cancer treatment that can give cures."
"They
have seen this technology develop. It has come over the mountain top,
if you like. With our melanoma trial they have seen it is safe – and it
is working."
T-cell therapy
Using the
body's immune system to fight cancer is one of the most promising areas
of therapy, and could prove particularly helpful in the treatment of
metastatic disease, when the cancer has spread from its original site.
The
immune system is complex and is composed of many kinds of cells,
proteins and chemical messengers that modulate how it works. Scientists
are working on ways of exploiting the immune defences to recognise and
eliminate cells that have become cancerous.
One of the most
interesting examples is ipilimumab, a "monoclonal antibody" made by
Bristol-Myers-Squib. It recognises and binds to a molecule, called
CTLA-4, which is found on the T-cells of the immune system. CTLA-4
normally keeps T-cells from proliferating, but in the presence of
ipilimumab, it becomes blocked, allowing T-cells to increase in numbers,
so leading them to attack cancer cells.
Other drugs based on
monoclonal antibodies are designed to attack tumours more directly. When
they bind to a cancerous cell, it serves as a signal for other cells of
the immune system to come in and sweep the cancer cells away.
The
trouble is that cancer cells are notoriously mutational. Eliminating
99.9 per cent of cancer cells in a patient may be an improvement, but it
still leaves 0.1 per cent that could "escape".
One hope of using
T-cells, is that this possibility of escape is narrowed down, or even
eliminated. Of course, these are still early days. This is only just
beginning to go through the first clinical trials. It could take five or
10 years before we know whether or not they work.
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