Health

New therapy strengthens the immune system's counterattack on skin cancer

Scientists behind a new type of immunotherapy are demonstrating significant effects in laboratory experiments in cell samples from patients with the aggressive form of skin cancer, Merkel cell carcinoma.

Scientists have shown in laboratory experiments that they are able to create a large number of the T cells that are capable of killing cancer cells. The image is a stained electron micrograph of a T cell from the American NIAID.

Facts

Merkel cell carcinoma is a rare and aggressive type of skin cancer caused by Merkel cell polyomavirus and/or UV radiation. It is also known as Merkel cell carcinoma and is treated with surgery, radiation, immunotherapy or chemotherapy.

Merkel cell carcinoma is mainly found in the head and neck area and on the arms and legs, where the skin gets the most sun. 

It usually appears as a firm reddish/purple bump on the skin that is not tender but grows rapidly. To make a diagnosis, a tissue sample is taken. The disease usually affects people over the age of 70 - and women are affected slightly more often than men. In about a third, the disease has spread by the time of diagnosis. This type of cancer is very rare. In Denmark, approximately 26 people are affected annually, and the number has increased in recent years.