Covid vaccination improves effectiveness of cancer treatment
Clinical study on nasopharyngeal cancer with unexpected result
Y.J. Hua / Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center
Many cancer cells are capable of subverting the body's immune response. They do this by pushing a kind of button on the immune cells, the PD-1 receptor. In this way, they effectively shut down these endogenous defense forces. Drugs can be used to block PD-1 receptors. This enables the immune system to fight the tumor more effectively.
Vaccination against Covid also stimulates the immune response, involving the PD-1 receptor. "It was feared that the vaccine would not be compatible with anti-PD-1 therapy," explains Dr. Jian Li of the Institute of Molecular Medicine and Experimental Immunology (IMMEI) at the University Hospital Bonn. "This risk is especially true for nasopharyngeal cancer, which, like the SARS Cov-2 virus, affects the upper respiratory tract."
Together with cooperation partners from the People's Republic of China, the bioinformatician has now investigated whether this concern is justified. More than 1,500 patients treated in 23 hospitals from all over China participated in the analysis. Such multi-center studies are considered to be particularly informative because the participants are very diverse and, moreover, the results are not distorted by regional characteristics.
Vaccinated patients responded better to cancer therapy
A subset of 373 affected individuals had been vaccinated with the Chinese Covid vaccine SinoVac. "Surprisingly, they responded significantly better to anti-PD-1 therapy than the unvaccinated patients," explains Prof. Dr. Christian Kurts, Director of IMMEI and member of the Transdisciplinary Research Area "Life & Health" and the Cluster of Excellence ImmunoSensation. "Furthermore, they did not experience severe side effects more often." The researchers cannot say why the treatment was more successful after vaccination. "We assume that vaccination activates certain immune cells, which then attack the tumor," says Prof. Dr. Qi Mei of Shanxi University Hospital. "We will now investigate this hypothesis further."
Nasopharyngeal cancer is quite rare in this country. In southern China and other countries in Southeast Asia, however, the disease is widespread. One of the suspected reasons for this is the frequent use of air conditioning in the hot and humid regions. Nutritional factors also appear to play an important role. In Taiwan, nasopharyngeal cancer is now considered one of the leading causes of death among young men.