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A cure may be available by the end of the decade: BioNTech successfully tests cancer vaccine

Kyiv • UNN

 • 25380 views

BioNTech reports successful trials of a cancer vaccine, plans to continue the study until 2029, and hopes to get approval by 2030. The vaccine, which uses personalized mRNA technology, has demonstrated tumor shrinkage in clinical trials.

A cure may be available by the end of the decade: BioNTech successfully tests cancer vaccine

BioNTech, the company that developed the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine, has announced successful trials of a cancer vaccine. This was stated in an interview with Bild am Sonntag by one of the founders of BioNTech, Ugur Shahin, UNN reports .

Details 

According to him, the company plans to obtain research data for a number of other therapeutic approaches between 2025 and 2029. It also hopes to have the first personalized mRNA-based cancer vaccines approved by 2030.

SEE ALSO: Lung cancer pills cut risk of death in half - study

We take blood and tumor samples from the patient, and after four weeks we inject an individualized vaccine... Ideally, it is not 100, but tens of thousands of patients a year

- Ugur Shahin explained.

Supplement

It is known that in October the company announced the results of the first clinical trial of a combination of an mRNA-based cancer vaccine and CAR T cell therapy. Tumors stopped growing in almost all patients and shrank in almost two-thirds.

This approach can make the immune system specifically find and destroy the tumor with the help of an army of special warriors

- Shahin said.

The scientist is confident that combination therapy of different approaches is the strategy of the future.

I am confident that over the next few years ADCS will be increasingly used as targeted chemotherapy, rather than classical chemotherapy, for many cancer indications

- Shahin said.

Recall

 Johnson & Johnson said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved its therapy for patients with a hard-to-treat type of blood cancer.

SEE ALSOBioNTech and OncoC4 announce promising results from lung cancer antibody trial