You may have seen this article in the Independent today highlighting a single NHS-ledtrial featuring one glioblastoma patient whose tumour ‘vanished’ after receiving ipilimumab, an immunotherapy drug.
This was also featured in The Sun last October. It’s encouraging that we are now seeing lots of activity as scientists explore new directions in brain cancer therapy, but this report does not mean ipilimumab is proven or widely available to treat glioblastoma. This is an early-phase, single-centre study, involving just 16 patients overall. It is primarily aimed at assessing safety and dosing, not proving effectiveness.
Helen Bulbeck, Director of Services and Policy at brainstrust says, “While the outcome for this one patient is understandably hopeful, we must be cautious.”
She expands, ” This is not a cure yet: such trials often report one positive result, but that’s not uncommon in early-stage studies. there’s also limited availability: this is only available to trial participants at one UK centre. It is not a broadly accessible therapy. We also don’t really know how effective this drug is. We need larger, randomised trials needed to compare outcomes. We understand that previous studies of ipilimumab combined with chemotherapy have not shown clear survival benefits in glioblastoma patients.”
You can read more on ipilimumab and chemotherapy in brain tumour research at nature.com: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41423-024-01226-x?utm
Accessing ipilimumab
In summary, ipilimumab remains an experimental option only in a tightly controlled clinical-trial context and is presently only available to a very few people who are being treated at University College Hospital, London. However, the news is good and we remain hopeful that there will be further positive developments from these trials.
Glioblastoma support and information
If you are interested in reading more about novel glioblastoma treatments and therapies that are in the pipeline, or for glioblastoma information, please click here.