A gene therapy invented at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center is the first to succeed in a U.S. phase III clinical
trial for cancer, as announced today at the American Society of Gene
Therapy annual meeting in Boston.
Introgen Therapeutics,
Inc., reported results of its phase III trial of Advexin(r), a modified
adenovirus that expresses the tumor-suppressing gene p53, for end-stage
head and neck cancer.
"Cells become cancerous because p53 no
longer functions. Restoring p53 works unlike any current cancer
treatment because it treats the cancer genome," said Jack Roth, M.D.,
professor in M. D. Anderson's Department of Thoracic &
Cardiovascular Surgery, who invented the drug and co-founded Introgen.
He remains a shareholder and paid consultant to Introgen, and the
University of Texas System is also a shareholder in Introgen. Read More...