Question for Jim Breitfeller

Forums General Melanoma Community Question for Jim Breitfeller

  • Post
    Jewel
    Participant

      Hi Jim,

      Since Nov 2010 I have been on this site daily just trying to learn all the things I can, I have to admit alot of your post are quite over

      my head. The dedication that you have put into learning about this disease is amazing. My husband was diagnosed in 2010 with Stage 3

      3.7 depth recurrance in leg 6 months later 3/19 nodes positive in LND. Clean scans since Sept 2011. He is Braf positive.

      I of course hope that it never comes back again, but of course that is rather optimistic. With all the data you have researched what order of

      Hi Jim,

      Since Nov 2010 I have been on this site daily just trying to learn all the things I can, I have to admit alot of your post are quite over

      my head. The dedication that you have put into learning about this disease is amazing. My husband was diagnosed in 2010 with Stage 3

      3.7 depth recurrance in leg 6 months later 3/19 nodes positive in LND. Clean scans since Sept 2011. He is Braf positive.

      I of course hope that it never comes back again, but of course that is rather optimistic. With all the data you have researched what order of

      treatment would you suggest? I know that is a pretty heavy question and I know everyones outcome is different but I think all of us take

      great comfort in your knowledge and opinion.

       

      Thank you,

       

      Jewel

    Viewing 2 reply threads
    • Replies
        jim Breitfeller
        Participant

          Jewel,

          Clean scans are good!!!! If he relapses, would you go with  SOC  (Standard of Care) that is  Yervoy,IL-2 and or Braf or would you try clinical trials?

          You might think about trying Anti-PD-1 followed by Yervoy and IL-2 or ACT therapy with Dr. Rosenberg at NCI or Dr. Hwu at MD Anderson.

          Are you willing to trave to get treatment. All these things come into play.

          What happens if comes back to the Brain?

          Best regards

           

          Jimmy B

          jim Breitfeller
          Participant

            Jewel,

            Clean scans are good!!!! If he relapses, would you go with  SOC  (Standard of Care) that is  Yervoy,IL-2 and or Braf or would you try clinical trials?

            You might think about trying Anti-PD-1 followed by Yervoy and IL-2 or ACT therapy with Dr. Rosenberg at NCI or Dr. Hwu at MD Anderson.

            Are you willing to trave to get treatment. All these things come into play.

            What happens if comes back to the Brain?

            Best regards

             

            Jimmy B

            jim Breitfeller
            Participant

              Jewel,

              Clean scans are good!!!! If he relapses, would you go with  SOC  (Standard of Care) that is  Yervoy,IL-2 and or Braf or would you try clinical trials?

              You might think about trying Anti-PD-1 followed by Yervoy and IL-2 or ACT therapy with Dr. Rosenberg at NCI or Dr. Hwu at MD Anderson.

              Are you willing to trave to get treatment. All these things come into play.

              What happens if comes back to the Brain?

              Best regards

               

              Jimmy B

                POW
                Participant

                  Thanks Jim (and Jewel). My brother is faced with making a similar decision and your input helps a lot.

                  By the way, does anyone know of any studies investigating the effect of combining Yervoy + IL-2? Is that a common treatment plan?

                  POW
                  Participant

                    Thanks Jim (and Jewel). My brother is faced with making a similar decision and your input helps a lot.

                    By the way, does anyone know of any studies investigating the effect of combining Yervoy + IL-2? Is that a common treatment plan?

                    POW
                    Participant

                      Thanks Jim (and Jewel). My brother is faced with making a similar decision and your input helps a lot.

                      By the way, does anyone know of any studies investigating the effect of combining Yervoy + IL-2? Is that a common treatment plan?

                      jim Breitfeller
                      Participant

                        Pow, The response rate for the combination of Yervoy (Anti-CTLA-4) and IL-2 is about 22 %

                         

                        Moving forward with immunotherapy: the rationale for anti-CTLA-4 therapy in melanoma

                        http://jco.imng.com/co/journal/articles/0507367.pdf 

                        Since both therapies are FDA approved, you should ask you Oncologist to about systematically combining the two therapies. Yervoy first, then IL-2 . Time Zero would be the time the first dose of Yervoy was delivered to the patient.

                        Approx. 50 days later, add the HD IL-2. This would be the maxium propagation time for the CD8 T-cells. Timing is everything.

                         

                        It would be better if you could do a Clinical trial with Anti-PD-1 first because the half life of the drug is quite long. It is about a month.

                        Targeting PD-1/PD-L1 interactions for cancer immunotherapy 

                         

                        http://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/oncoimmunology/article/21335/?show_full_text=true 

                        There is some data that sugests that there is a synergistic immune response when Yervoy (Anti-CTLA-4 and Anti-PD1 are used together.

                        POW
                        Participant

                          Hi, Jim-

                          Wow! You really ARE an invaluable resource for us! Thank you so much for the excellent citations. I will read both of them carefully (and probably several times!) smiley

                          Your recommendations about the timing and synergy of anti-CTL4 and IL-2 are very helpful and exactly what I need. Do you have any citations for those recommendations?

                          The reason I ask is because my brother's VA oncologist is a great guy– smart, pleasant, willing, and sincerely concerned about his patients. However, being new to the VA, he is very reluctant to ruffle any feathers of the senior VA doctors. He is quick to prescribe and fight for any treatment that is already in the VA formulary. However, trying to do anything new and different (like combining Zelboraf and Yervoy as some private oncologists do) is out of the question. 

                          If I could give our nice, young oncologist published data that supports combining Yervoy + IL-2 (both of which are in the VA formulary), he might be willing to make a case to the department honchos.

                          My brother is going to look into available clinical trials before starting Yervoy. But if he can't get into a trial, it looks as though combining Yervoy and IL-2 could be better than Yervoy alone. I would very much appreciate anything you could give me that supports that approach. 

                          jim Breitfeller
                          Participant

                             

                            Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 blockade with ipilimumab: Long-term follow-up of 179 patients with metastatic melanoma.

                            Print

                             

                            Sub-category:

                            Melanoma

                             

                             

                            Category:

                            Melanoma/Skin Cancers

                             

                             

                            Meeting:

                            2010 ASCO Annual Meeting

                             

                             

                            Session Type and Session Title:

                            General Poster Session, Melanoma/Skin Cancers

                             

                             

                            Abstract No:

                            8544  

                             

                            http://www.asco.org/ASCOv2/Meetings/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=74&abstractID=53615 

                            Background: We have previously shown objective clinical responses in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with CTLA-4 blockade using ipilimumab. We have treated 179 patients in 3 separate clinical trials and now have long-term follow-up to evaluate the durability and unique features of this immunotherapy. Methods: A total of 179 patients with metastatic melanoma were treated in 3 trials: In Protocol 1, 56 patients received ipilimumab with gp100 peptide vaccines. In Protocol 2, 36 patients received ipilimumab with high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2). In Protocol 3, 87 patients received intra-patient dose escalation of ipilimumab and were randomized to receive gp100 peptides. We have updated and analyzed the follow-up and survival data for these trials. Results: With median follow-up for Protocol 1, 2, and 3 being 80, 71, and 60 months, median survival was 15, 16, and 13 months, respectively. Objective tumor regression was 12% for Protocol 1, 25% for Protocol 2, and 21% for Protocol 3. Patients in Protocol 2 had a 17% complete response rate (6 patients: 77+, 74+, 72+, 71+, 71+, and 69+ months), as compared to 7% in Protocol 1 (4 patients: 82+, 81+, 79+, and 66+ months) and 8% in Protocol 3 (5 patients: 64+, 63+, 62+, 60+, and 55+ months); all complete responses are ongoing. Many patients who eventually became complete responders had continual tumor shrinkage after stopping therapy. Conclusions: CTLA-4 blockade with ipilimumab can achieve durable objective tumor regression in patients with metastatic melanoma. The combination of ipilimumab and IL-2 appears to have an increased complete response rate, although this needs to be tested in a prospective randomized trial. This report represents the largest single-institution experience with the longest follow-up for this agent; our results support its role as a viable treatment option for patients with metastatic melanoma. 

                             

                            You want a complete response!!!!!  All signs of cancer are gone. You may be CURED!!!!!

                             

                            Jimmy B

                             

                            POW
                            Participant

                              That's perfect, Jim! Thank you! I requested a reprint of the complete article and I will send it to my brother's oncologist. Hopefully, he will mull it over between now and the time that IL-2 should be administered.

                              Speaking of time to administer IL-2… where did you get the number "50 days after starting ipilimumab"? Since you think that this timing is critical, it would be good for the oncologist to see something about that, too.

                               Thank you so much for being such a big help!

                              POW
                              Participant

                                That's perfect, Jim! Thank you! I requested a reprint of the complete article and I will send it to my brother's oncologist. Hopefully, he will mull it over between now and the time that IL-2 should be administered.

                                Speaking of time to administer IL-2… where did you get the number "50 days after starting ipilimumab"? Since you think that this timing is critical, it would be good for the oncologist to see something about that, too.

                                 Thank you so much for being such a big help!

                                jim Breitfeller
                                Participant

                                  POW,

                                  Actually, In my own Treatment I documented my treatments as if I doing a research paper. I wrote everything down including Dates, Timing of drugs and how I felt. It turned into a research paper called "Melanoma and the Magic bullet, Anti-CTLA-4". I also found some references in a paper called

                                  Autologous Tumor Specific Cytotoxic Lymphocytes in the Infiltrate of Human Metastatic Melanomas  Activation by Interleukin 2 and Autologous Tumor Cells, and Involvement of the T Cell Receptor[published J . Exp. MED.  The RockefellerUniversityPress. 1988 Oct 1;Vol 168 October 1988 1419-1441

                                  http://jem.rupress.org/cgi/reprint/168/4/1419.pdf

                                  By: Itoh, K; Platsoucas, CD; Balch, CM 

                                  This timing of the Maxium propagation time of 50 days for T-cells. If you add the IL-2 in the growth phase, you will grow the unwanted T-Regulatory cells that suppress the T-cells by secreting IL-10 and upregulating of the CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptors that are used by the immune system as checkpoint  modulators.

                                  Also, Dr. Jedd Wolchok did some studies monitoring the Absoute Lymphocyte counts (ALC) and found that of the count doubled by the 7 week (49 days) after administering Yervoy, the patient seem to have clinical benefit.

                                   

                                  It was also discovered that it was better to add IL-2 durning the contraction phase of the T-cells. So that would be 50 daysor so  after activation. This was bsed on a paper from Blattman.

                                  "Therapeutic use of IL-2 to enhance antiviral T- cells responces in vivo"

                                   

                                  https://www.box.net/shared/109rgqkvqd 

                                   

                                   

                                  I hope this helps

                                   

                                  Jimmy B

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                  jim Breitfeller
                                  Participant

                                    POW,

                                    Actually, In my own Treatment I documented my treatments as if I doing a research paper. I wrote everything down including Dates, Timing of drugs and how I felt. It turned into a research paper called "Melanoma and the Magic bullet, Anti-CTLA-4". I also found some references in a paper called

                                    Autologous Tumor Specific Cytotoxic Lymphocytes in the Infiltrate of Human Metastatic Melanomas  Activation by Interleukin 2 and Autologous Tumor Cells, and Involvement of the T Cell Receptor[published J . Exp. MED.  The RockefellerUniversityPress. 1988 Oct 1;Vol 168 October 1988 1419-1441

                                    http://jem.rupress.org/cgi/reprint/168/4/1419.pdf

                                    By: Itoh, K; Platsoucas, CD; Balch, CM 

                                    This timing of the Maxium propagation time of 50 days for T-cells. If you add the IL-2 in the growth phase, you will grow the unwanted T-Regulatory cells that suppress the T-cells by secreting IL-10 and upregulating of the CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptors that are used by the immune system as checkpoint  modulators.

                                    Also, Dr. Jedd Wolchok did some studies monitoring the Absoute Lymphocyte counts (ALC) and found that of the count doubled by the 7 week (49 days) after administering Yervoy, the patient seem to have clinical benefit.

                                     

                                    It was also discovered that it was better to add IL-2 durning the contraction phase of the T-cells. So that would be 50 daysor so  after activation. This was bsed on a paper from Blattman.

                                    "Therapeutic use of IL-2 to enhance antiviral T- cells responces in vivo"

                                     

                                    https://www.box.net/shared/109rgqkvqd 

                                     

                                     

                                    I hope this helps

                                     

                                    Jimmy B

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                     

                                    POW
                                    Participant

                                      Very impressive! And very helpful!

                                      Thanks so much!

                                      POW
                                      Participant

                                        Very impressive! And very helpful!

                                        Thanks so much!

                                        POW
                                        Participant

                                          Very impressive! And very helpful!

                                          Thanks so much!

                                          jim Breitfeller
                                          Participant

                                            POW,

                                            Actually, In my own Treatment I documented my treatments as if I doing a research paper. I wrote everything down including Dates, Timing of drugs and how I felt. It turned into a research paper called "Melanoma and the Magic bullet, Anti-CTLA-4". I also found some references in a paper called

                                            Autologous Tumor Specific Cytotoxic Lymphocytes in the Infiltrate of Human Metastatic Melanomas  Activation by Interleukin 2 and Autologous Tumor Cells, and Involvement of the T Cell Receptor[published J . Exp. MED.  The RockefellerUniversityPress. 1988 Oct 1;Vol 168 October 1988 1419-1441

                                            http://jem.rupress.org/cgi/reprint/168/4/1419.pdf

                                            By: Itoh, K; Platsoucas, CD; Balch, CM 

                                            This timing of the Maxium propagation time of 50 days for T-cells. If you add the IL-2 in the growth phase, you will grow the unwanted T-Regulatory cells that suppress the T-cells by secreting IL-10 and upregulating of the CTLA-4 and PD-1 receptors that are used by the immune system as checkpoint  modulators.

                                            Also, Dr. Jedd Wolchok did some studies monitoring the Absoute Lymphocyte counts (ALC) and found that of the count doubled by the 7 week (49 days) after administering Yervoy, the patient seem to have clinical benefit.

                                             

                                            It was also discovered that it was better to add IL-2 durning the contraction phase of the T-cells. So that would be 50 daysor so  after activation. This was bsed on a paper from Blattman.

                                            "Therapeutic use of IL-2 to enhance antiviral T- cells responces in vivo"

                                             

                                            https://www.box.net/shared/109rgqkvqd 

                                             

                                             

                                            I hope this helps

                                             

                                            Jimmy B

                                             

                                             

                                             

                                             

                                             

                                             

                                             

                                             

                                            POW
                                            Participant

                                              That's perfect, Jim! Thank you! I requested a reprint of the complete article and I will send it to my brother's oncologist. Hopefully, he will mull it over between now and the time that IL-2 should be administered.

                                              Speaking of time to administer IL-2… where did you get the number "50 days after starting ipilimumab"? Since you think that this timing is critical, it would be good for the oncologist to see something about that, too.

                                               Thank you so much for being such a big help!

                                              jim Breitfeller
                                              Participant

                                                 

                                                Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 blockade with ipilimumab: Long-term follow-up of 179 patients with metastatic melanoma.

                                                Print

                                                 

                                                Sub-category:

                                                Melanoma

                                                 

                                                 

                                                Category:

                                                Melanoma/Skin Cancers

                                                 

                                                 

                                                Meeting:

                                                2010 ASCO Annual Meeting

                                                 

                                                 

                                                Session Type and Session Title:

                                                General Poster Session, Melanoma/Skin Cancers

                                                 

                                                 

                                                Abstract No:

                                                8544  

                                                 

                                                http://www.asco.org/ASCOv2/Meetings/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=74&abstractID=53615 

                                                Background: We have previously shown objective clinical responses in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with CTLA-4 blockade using ipilimumab. We have treated 179 patients in 3 separate clinical trials and now have long-term follow-up to evaluate the durability and unique features of this immunotherapy. Methods: A total of 179 patients with metastatic melanoma were treated in 3 trials: In Protocol 1, 56 patients received ipilimumab with gp100 peptide vaccines. In Protocol 2, 36 patients received ipilimumab with high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2). In Protocol 3, 87 patients received intra-patient dose escalation of ipilimumab and were randomized to receive gp100 peptides. We have updated and analyzed the follow-up and survival data for these trials. Results: With median follow-up for Protocol 1, 2, and 3 being 80, 71, and 60 months, median survival was 15, 16, and 13 months, respectively. Objective tumor regression was 12% for Protocol 1, 25% for Protocol 2, and 21% for Protocol 3. Patients in Protocol 2 had a 17% complete response rate (6 patients: 77+, 74+, 72+, 71+, 71+, and 69+ months), as compared to 7% in Protocol 1 (4 patients: 82+, 81+, 79+, and 66+ months) and 8% in Protocol 3 (5 patients: 64+, 63+, 62+, 60+, and 55+ months); all complete responses are ongoing. Many patients who eventually became complete responders had continual tumor shrinkage after stopping therapy. Conclusions: CTLA-4 blockade with ipilimumab can achieve durable objective tumor regression in patients with metastatic melanoma. The combination of ipilimumab and IL-2 appears to have an increased complete response rate, although this needs to be tested in a prospective randomized trial. This report represents the largest single-institution experience with the longest follow-up for this agent; our results support its role as a viable treatment option for patients with metastatic melanoma. 

                                                 

                                                You want a complete response!!!!!  All signs of cancer are gone. You may be CURED!!!!!

                                                 

                                                Jimmy B

                                                 

                                                jim Breitfeller
                                                Participant

                                                   

                                                  Cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 blockade with ipilimumab: Long-term follow-up of 179 patients with metastatic melanoma.

                                                  Print

                                                   

                                                  Sub-category:

                                                  Melanoma

                                                   

                                                   

                                                  Category:

                                                  Melanoma/Skin Cancers

                                                   

                                                   

                                                  Meeting:

                                                  2010 ASCO Annual Meeting

                                                   

                                                   

                                                  Session Type and Session Title:

                                                  General Poster Session, Melanoma/Skin Cancers

                                                   

                                                   

                                                  Abstract No:

                                                  8544  

                                                   

                                                  http://www.asco.org/ASCOv2/Meetings/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=74&abstractID=53615 

                                                  Background: We have previously shown objective clinical responses in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with CTLA-4 blockade using ipilimumab. We have treated 179 patients in 3 separate clinical trials and now have long-term follow-up to evaluate the durability and unique features of this immunotherapy. Methods: A total of 179 patients with metastatic melanoma were treated in 3 trials: In Protocol 1, 56 patients received ipilimumab with gp100 peptide vaccines. In Protocol 2, 36 patients received ipilimumab with high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2). In Protocol 3, 87 patients received intra-patient dose escalation of ipilimumab and were randomized to receive gp100 peptides. We have updated and analyzed the follow-up and survival data for these trials. Results: With median follow-up for Protocol 1, 2, and 3 being 80, 71, and 60 months, median survival was 15, 16, and 13 months, respectively. Objective tumor regression was 12% for Protocol 1, 25% for Protocol 2, and 21% for Protocol 3. Patients in Protocol 2 had a 17% complete response rate (6 patients: 77+, 74+, 72+, 71+, 71+, and 69+ months), as compared to 7% in Protocol 1 (4 patients: 82+, 81+, 79+, and 66+ months) and 8% in Protocol 3 (5 patients: 64+, 63+, 62+, 60+, and 55+ months); all complete responses are ongoing. Many patients who eventually became complete responders had continual tumor shrinkage after stopping therapy. Conclusions: CTLA-4 blockade with ipilimumab can achieve durable objective tumor regression in patients with metastatic melanoma. The combination of ipilimumab and IL-2 appears to have an increased complete response rate, although this needs to be tested in a prospective randomized trial. This report represents the largest single-institution experience with the longest follow-up for this agent; our results support its role as a viable treatment option for patients with metastatic melanoma. 

                                                   

                                                  You want a complete response!!!!!  All signs of cancer are gone. You may be CURED!!!!!

                                                   

                                                  Jimmy B

                                                   

                                                  POW
                                                  Participant

                                                    Hi, Jim-

                                                    Wow! You really ARE an invaluable resource for us! Thank you so much for the excellent citations. I will read both of them carefully (and probably several times!) smiley

                                                    Your recommendations about the timing and synergy of anti-CTL4 and IL-2 are very helpful and exactly what I need. Do you have any citations for those recommendations?

                                                    The reason I ask is because my brother's VA oncologist is a great guy– smart, pleasant, willing, and sincerely concerned about his patients. However, being new to the VA, he is very reluctant to ruffle any feathers of the senior VA doctors. He is quick to prescribe and fight for any treatment that is already in the VA formulary. However, trying to do anything new and different (like combining Zelboraf and Yervoy as some private oncologists do) is out of the question. 

                                                    If I could give our nice, young oncologist published data that supports combining Yervoy + IL-2 (both of which are in the VA formulary), he might be willing to make a case to the department honchos.

                                                    My brother is going to look into available clinical trials before starting Yervoy. But if he can't get into a trial, it looks as though combining Yervoy and IL-2 could be better than Yervoy alone. I would very much appreciate anything you could give me that supports that approach. 

                                                    POW
                                                    Participant

                                                      Hi, Jim-

                                                      Wow! You really ARE an invaluable resource for us! Thank you so much for the excellent citations. I will read both of them carefully (and probably several times!) smiley

                                                      Your recommendations about the timing and synergy of anti-CTL4 and IL-2 are very helpful and exactly what I need. Do you have any citations for those recommendations?

                                                      The reason I ask is because my brother's VA oncologist is a great guy– smart, pleasant, willing, and sincerely concerned about his patients. However, being new to the VA, he is very reluctant to ruffle any feathers of the senior VA doctors. He is quick to prescribe and fight for any treatment that is already in the VA formulary. However, trying to do anything new and different (like combining Zelboraf and Yervoy as some private oncologists do) is out of the question. 

                                                      If I could give our nice, young oncologist published data that supports combining Yervoy + IL-2 (both of which are in the VA formulary), he might be willing to make a case to the department honchos.

                                                      My brother is going to look into available clinical trials before starting Yervoy. But if he can't get into a trial, it looks as though combining Yervoy and IL-2 could be better than Yervoy alone. I would very much appreciate anything you could give me that supports that approach. 

                                                      jim Breitfeller
                                                      Participant

                                                        Pow, The response rate for the combination of Yervoy (Anti-CTLA-4) and IL-2 is about 22 %

                                                         

                                                        Moving forward with immunotherapy: the rationale for anti-CTLA-4 therapy in melanoma

                                                        http://jco.imng.com/co/journal/articles/0507367.pdf 

                                                        Since both therapies are FDA approved, you should ask you Oncologist to about systematically combining the two therapies. Yervoy first, then IL-2 . Time Zero would be the time the first dose of Yervoy was delivered to the patient.

                                                        Approx. 50 days later, add the HD IL-2. This would be the maxium propagation time for the CD8 T-cells. Timing is everything.

                                                         

                                                        It would be better if you could do a Clinical trial with Anti-PD-1 first because the half life of the drug is quite long. It is about a month.

                                                        Targeting PD-1/PD-L1 interactions for cancer immunotherapy 

                                                         

                                                        http://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/oncoimmunology/article/21335/?show_full_text=true 

                                                        There is some data that sugests that there is a synergistic immune response when Yervoy (Anti-CTLA-4 and Anti-PD1 are used together.

                                                        jim Breitfeller
                                                        Participant

                                                          Pow, The response rate for the combination of Yervoy (Anti-CTLA-4) and IL-2 is about 22 %

                                                           

                                                          Moving forward with immunotherapy: the rationale for anti-CTLA-4 therapy in melanoma

                                                          http://jco.imng.com/co/journal/articles/0507367.pdf 

                                                          Since both therapies are FDA approved, you should ask you Oncologist to about systematically combining the two therapies. Yervoy first, then IL-2 . Time Zero would be the time the first dose of Yervoy was delivered to the patient.

                                                          Approx. 50 days later, add the HD IL-2. This would be the maxium propagation time for the CD8 T-cells. Timing is everything.

                                                           

                                                          It would be better if you could do a Clinical trial with Anti-PD-1 first because the half life of the drug is quite long. It is about a month.

                                                          Targeting PD-1/PD-L1 interactions for cancer immunotherapy 

                                                           

                                                          http://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/oncoimmunology/article/21335/?show_full_text=true 

                                                          There is some data that sugests that there is a synergistic immune response when Yervoy (Anti-CTLA-4 and Anti-PD1 are used together.

                                                          Jewel
                                                          Participant

                                                            Hi Jim,

                                                            I appreciate you taking the time to reply. Of course you would always hope that your Doctors would steer

                                                            you in the best direction to go. My husband is being followed by a local oncologist here, in case of recurrance we

                                                            have another Dr at Sloan. We were told last year that my husband didn't qualify for any trial. We do have the ability

                                                            to travel if needed.

                                                            The thought of it coming back anywhere is scarey, as for the brain I hope we never find out, Gamma Knife if it

                                                            is an option seems the best route to go.

                                                            Does SOC seem like a lazy choice? Do you believe clinical trials is a better option?

                                                            Thank you Jim

                                                            Jewel

                                                            jim Breitfeller
                                                            Participant

                                                              Jewel,

                                                              If you do the SOC first, It may disqualify you from the clinical trials later.

                                                              I would look for trials with DC vaccines + Anti-PD-1 or Yervoy as my first choice.

                                                               

                                                              Best regards

                                                               

                                                              Jimmy b

                                                              Jewel
                                                              Participant

                                                                Thank you Jimmy b….:-)

                                                                Jewel
                                                                Participant

                                                                  Thank you Jimmy b….:-)

                                                                  Jewel
                                                                  Participant

                                                                    Thank you Jimmy b….:-)

                                                                    jim Breitfeller
                                                                    Participant

                                                                      Jewel,

                                                                      If you do the SOC first, It may disqualify you from the clinical trials later.

                                                                      I would look for trials with DC vaccines + Anti-PD-1 or Yervoy as my first choice.

                                                                       

                                                                      Best regards

                                                                       

                                                                      Jimmy b

                                                                      jim Breitfeller
                                                                      Participant

                                                                        Jewel,

                                                                        If you do the SOC first, It may disqualify you from the clinical trials later.

                                                                        I would look for trials with DC vaccines + Anti-PD-1 or Yervoy as my first choice.

                                                                         

                                                                        Best regards

                                                                         

                                                                        Jimmy b

                                                                        Jewel
                                                                        Participant

                                                                          Hi Jim,

                                                                          I appreciate you taking the time to reply. Of course you would always hope that your Doctors would steer

                                                                          you in the best direction to go. My husband is being followed by a local oncologist here, in case of recurrance we

                                                                          have another Dr at Sloan. We were told last year that my husband didn't qualify for any trial. We do have the ability

                                                                          to travel if needed.

                                                                          The thought of it coming back anywhere is scarey, as for the brain I hope we never find out, Gamma Knife if it

                                                                          is an option seems the best route to go.

                                                                          Does SOC seem like a lazy choice? Do you believe clinical trials is a better option?

                                                                          Thank you Jim

                                                                          Jewel

                                                                          Jewel
                                                                          Participant

                                                                            Hi Jim,

                                                                            I appreciate you taking the time to reply. Of course you would always hope that your Doctors would steer

                                                                            you in the best direction to go. My husband is being followed by a local oncologist here, in case of recurrance we

                                                                            have another Dr at Sloan. We were told last year that my husband didn't qualify for any trial. We do have the ability

                                                                            to travel if needed.

                                                                            The thought of it coming back anywhere is scarey, as for the brain I hope we never find out, Gamma Knife if it

                                                                            is an option seems the best route to go.

                                                                            Does SOC seem like a lazy choice? Do you believe clinical trials is a better option?

                                                                            Thank you Jim

                                                                            Jewel

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