Dr. Catherine Wu Wants To Make Personalized Cancer Vaccines A Reality
Language
Reading Level
Listen to Article
Scientists have found cures for many types of diseases. However, a guaranteed way to fight cancer has proved elusive. That is because every person's cancer is based on their particular genes. Dr. Catherine Wu and her team at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, aim to change that by developing custom vaccines to fight each person's unique cancer.
Dr. Wu's research focuses on harnessing the power of the body's immune system to fight cancer cells. She got the idea after watching how a bone marrow transplant helped leukemia patients reset their immune systems to fight the disease.
"There in front of my eyes were people who are being cured of their leukemia because of the mobilization of the immune response,” she said.
The researcher wondered if vaccines created using an individual's cancer characteristics could stimulate their immune system to attack the diseased cells more effectively.
For their first study, Dr. Wu and her team chose six people suffering from advanced melanoma, a type of skin cancer. The scientists began by analyzing each individual's cancer characteristics. They then created personalized vaccines containing each patient's unique proteins. The vaccines were designed to train the patients' immune systems to recognize and kill cancer cells while sparing the healthy ones.
In 2015, all individuals were given a seven-shot course of their personalized vaccines. By 2017, four patients showed no signs of cancer recurrence. The tumors did return for the two patients with the most advanced cancer. But the growths disappeared after the patients received four more doses of the customized vaccines. By 2021, all six patients were declared cancer-free.
Though the sample size is small, Dr. Wu's research has proved that personalized vaccines can effectively battle cancer. Her pioneering work has earned her numerous awards. Most recently, in February 2024, she received the prestigious Sjöberg Prize. The honor carries a prize of $1 million — $100,000 as award money and $900,000 to fund future cancer research.
Resources: harvard.edu, CNN.com, danafarber.com
Get the Workbook for this article!
Workbook contains: Article, Reading Comprehension, Critical Thinking Questions, Vocabulary in Context (+ answers), Multiple Choice Quiz (+ answers), Parts of Speech Quiz (+ answers), Vocabulary Game (+ answers)Cite Article
Learn Keywords in this Article
28 Comments
- coco_quin5 monthsCan we stop cancer please it is just so sad
- ganowemokyko5 monthsIts really not possible to stop it completely but it can be cured tho!
- nightbutchromeb5 monthsWe have a possible cure for cancer and there are still people who refuse to use modern medicine, remember that.
- 5r7ytgrt66 monthsMy dog survived from cancer :)
- girly_pop325 monthsThat's AWSOME because a lot of pets and people die because of cancer. 🤒
- pokepro9986 monthsWait really
- jkean20126 monthsIn a few years cancer might not be so deadly anymore
- tigrsfanbob09096 monthsso cool !!!
- kaylee6636 monthsWow! This can help so many people!
- readerezra6 monthsWhat an amazing discovery! I think that this will help to get us closer to being able to cure cancer.
- sorry_not_sorry6 monthsI think this is a great idea it can save a lot of people from cancer and help them from getting it again☺
- kabl756 monthsThat is so cool!
- emily336 monthsthank you this is very inportent