Benefits of Using CART-T Therapies to Treat Rare Cancers

Video

Manuel Litchman, MD, President and CEO of Mustang Bio Inc, highlights the advantages of using CAR-T therapies as treatments for rare cancers.

At the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 2018 annual meeting in Chicago, Manuel Litchman, MD, President and CEO of Mustang Bio Inc, highlighted the advantages of using CAR-T therapies as treatments for rare cancers.

Dr Litchman: CAR-Ts offer the ability to respond to therapy in a way that, really, no other therapy can. You have heard a lot about immune-oncology harnessing the power of the patient’s own immune system to attack and kill the cancer cells. The CAR-T therapy is an especially powerful way of doing that. It has the specificity of an antibody, and it has the power of the T cells that are directed to a particulate target by the antibody to selectively kill tumor cells that express that target.

The remissions that have been seen in patients have really been quite dramatic—often irrespective of numbers of lines of previous therapy. [It is] able to treat patients that are very sick as well. Yes, there are many side effects, but we’re learning how to manage those side effects, and so, we are able to treat sicker and sicker patients that are end-stage. Once the efficacy and safety are established in those patient populations, then, like all therapies, we would hope to move those therapies to potentially frontline therapy, or at least, second- or third-line therapy. This is being done now across the CAR-T field.

For more exclusive 2018 ASCO coverage, be sure to sign up to receive Rare Disease Report ®’s email updates.

Recent Videos
Barry J Byrne, MD, PhD, the chief medical advisor of MDA and a physician-scientist at the University of Florida
Barry J Byrne, MD, PhD, the chief medical advisor of MDA and a physician-scientist at the University of Florida
Sarah Larson, MD, the medical director of the Immune Effector Cell Therapy Program in the Division of Hematology/Oncology at David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
David Porter, MD, the director of cell therapy and transplant at Penn Medicine
David Porter, MD, the director of cell therapy and transplant at Penn Medicine
Georg Schett, MD, vice president research and chair of internal medicine at the University of Erlangen – Nuremberg
Manali Kamdar, MD, the associate professor of medicine–hematology and clinical director of lymphoma services at the University of Colorado
Manali Kamdar, MD, the associate professor of medicine–hematology and clinical director of lymphoma services at the University of Colorado
Ben Samelson-Jones, MD, PhD, assistant professor pediatric hematology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Associate Director, Clinical In Vivo Gene Therapy, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
© 2025 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.