Berliner Boersenzeitung - First child cured of rare brain tumour 'offers real hope'

EUR -
AED 4.273873
AFN 76.929105
ALL 96.379067
AMD 444.029165
ANG 2.083178
AOA 1067.159907
ARS 1669.272238
AUD 1.756871
AWG 2.097662
AZN 1.979007
BAM 1.953746
BBD 2.344035
BDT 142.270396
BGN 1.955457
BHD 0.438721
BIF 3450.522479
BMD 1.163751
BND 1.509219
BOB 8.070548
BRL 6.320677
BSD 1.163776
BTN 104.758292
BWP 15.482786
BYN 3.365775
BYR 22809.524649
BZD 2.340649
CAD 1.612779
CDF 2597.492788
CHF 0.939101
CLF 0.027377
CLP 1074.002511
CNY 8.229703
CNH 8.229217
COP 4447.857307
CRC 568.302402
CUC 1.163751
CUP 30.839408
CVE 110.730605
CZK 24.29028
DJF 206.822123
DKK 7.468604
DOP 74.771025
DZD 151.366954
EGP 55.248856
ERN 17.456269
ETB 180.916335
FJD 2.643812
FKP 0.872848
GBP 0.873441
GEL 3.136298
GGP 0.872848
GHS 13.336175
GIP 0.872848
GMD 85.546628
GNF 10111.253446
GTQ 8.914626
GYD 243.48501
HKD 9.054869
HNL 30.651768
HRK 7.533312
HTG 152.379765
HUF 384.868819
IDR 19409.043474
ILS 3.752108
IMP 0.872848
INR 104.908859
IQD 1524.596811
IRR 49023.021981
ISK 148.913831
JEP 0.872848
JMD 186.573808
JOD 0.825087
JPY 181.472459
KES 150.414828
KGS 101.769946
KHR 4661.987879
KMF 491.10353
KPW 1047.375979
KRW 1710.377003
KWD 0.357377
KYD 0.969884
KZT 594.694649
LAK 25239.567778
LBP 104218.856453
LKR 359.122365
LRD 205.414879
LSL 19.76172
LTL 3.436255
LVL 0.703942
LYD 6.32435
MAD 10.750995
MDL 19.732335
MGA 5189.56521
MKD 61.575251
MMK 2443.911415
MNT 4128.95989
MOP 9.326693
MRU 46.412195
MUR 53.672293
MVR 17.922294
MWK 2018.086552
MXN 21.261474
MYR 4.786468
MZN 74.375604
NAD 19.76172
NGN 1687.974768
NIO 42.824967
NOK 11.789138
NPR 167.613466
NZD 2.01475
OMR 0.447463
PAB 1.163781
PEN 3.914684
PGK 4.938807
PHP 68.853362
PKR 328.919325
PLN 4.23787
PYG 8003.583833
QAR 4.242039
RON 5.08815
RSD 117.38526
RUB 89.084365
RWF 1693.31939
SAR 4.367717
SBD 9.578362
SCR 16.246878
SDG 699.998259
SEK 10.94081
SGD 1.510321
SHP 0.873115
SLE 27.58248
SLL 24403.279831
SOS 663.904724
SRD 44.989458
STD 24087.301428
STN 24.474264
SVC 10.183292
SYP 12867.40098
SZL 19.756225
THB 37.123534
TJS 10.677872
TMT 4.084767
TND 3.418505
TOP 2.802034
TRY 49.539023
TTD 7.884743
TWD 36.277034
TZS 2851.190884
UAH 49.062908
UGX 4117.670065
USD 1.163751
UYU 45.462194
UZS 13954.326331
VES 299.789534
VND 30676.48315
VUV 141.795037
WST 3.245248
XAF 655.270765
XAG 0.020015
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.145096
XCG 2.097494
XDR 0.81481
XOF 655.267953
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.613186
ZAR 19.828029
ZMK 10475.158382
ZMW 26.912815
ZWL 374.72743
  • RBGPF

    0.8500

    79.2

    +1.07%

  • CMSC

    -0.2100

    23.22

    -0.9%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.17

    -0.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    14.8

    +2.09%

  • RIO

    -0.0400

    73.02

    -0.05%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    16.12

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.0800

    75.33

    -0.11%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    48.47

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    12.5

    +0.24%

  • BCC

    -1.2400

    71.81

    -1.73%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.72

    -0.51%

  • AZN

    1.1000

    91.28

    +1.21%

  • BTI

    0.4000

    57.41

    +0.7%

  • BCE

    -0.2100

    23.34

    -0.9%

  • RELX

    -0.8400

    39.48

    -2.13%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    35.78

    -0.14%

First child cured of rare brain tumour 'offers real hope'
First child cured of rare brain tumour 'offers real hope' / Photo: Fred TANNEAU - AFP/File

First child cured of rare brain tumour 'offers real hope'

When Lucas was diagnosed with a rare type of brain tumour at the age of six, there was no doubting the prognosis.

Text size:

French doctor Jacques Grill gets emotional when he remembers having to tell Lucas's parents that their son was going to die,

However, seven years later, Lucas is now 13 years old and there is no trace of the tumour left.

The Belgian boy is the first child in the world to have been cured of brainstem glioma, a particularly brutal cancer, according to the researchers who treated him.

"Lucas beat all the odds" to survive, said Grill, head of the brain tumour programme at the Gustave Roussy cancer centre in Paris.

The tumour, which has the full name diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), is diagnosed every year in around 300 children in the United States, and up to 100 in France.

Ahead of International Childhood Cancer Day on Thursday, the medical community has praised advances that mean 85 percent of children now survive more than five years after being diagnosed with cancer.

But the outlook for children with the DIPG tumour remains grim -- most do not live a year beyond diagnosis. A recent study found that only 10 percent were alive two years on.

Radiotherapy can sometimes slow the rapid march of the aggressive tumour, but no drug has been shown to be effective against it.

- 'No other case like him' -

Lucas and his family travelled from Belgium to France so that he could become one of the first patients to join the BIOMEDE trial which tests potential new drugs for DIPG.

From the start, Lucas responded strongly to the cancer drug everolimus, which he was randomly assigned.

"Over a series of MRI scans, I watched as the tumour completely disappeared," Grill told AFP.

But the doctor did not dare stop the treatment regimen -- at least until a year and a half ago, when Lucas revealed he was no longer taking the drugs anyways.

"I don't know of any other case like him in the world," Grill said.

Exactly why Lucas so fully recovered, and how his case could help other children like him in the future, remains to be seen.

Seven other children in the trial survived years after being diagnosed, but only Lucas's tumour completely vanished.

The reason these children responded to the drugs, while others did not, was likely due to the "biological particularities" of their individual tumours, Grill said.

"Lucas's tumour had an extremely rare mutation which we believe made its cells far more sensitive to the drug," he added.

- Reproducing Lucas -

The researchers are studying the genetic abnormalities of patients' tumours as well as creating tumour "organoids," which are masses of cells produced in the lab.

"Lucas's case offers real hope," said Marie-Anne Debily, a researcher supervising the lab work.

"We will try to reproduce in vitro the differences that we have identified in his cells," she told AFP.

The team want to reproduce his genetic differences in the organoids to see if the tumour can then be killed off as effectively as it was in Lucas.

If that works, the "next step will be to find a drug that has the same effect on tumour cells as these cellular changes," Debily said.

While the researchers are excited about this new lead, they warned that any possible treatment is still a long way off.

"On average, it takes 10-15 years from the first lead to become a drug -- it's a long and drawn-out process," Grill said.

David Ziegler, a paediatric oncologist at Sydney Children's Hospital in Australia, said that the landscape for DIPG has dramatically changed over the last decade.

Breakthroughs in the lab, increased funding and trials such as BIOMEDE make "me convinced that we will soon find that we are able to cure some patients," Ziegler told AFP.

(K.Müller--BBZ)