Monday, March 30, 2026
Can a patient's own immune cells be turned into a treatment for advanced melanoma?
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Can a patient's own immune cells be turned into a treatment for advanced melanoma?

Plain Language Summary
What this means for you:
Early study tests using a patient's own immune cells to treat advanced melanoma.

When melanoma spreads, treatment options can run out. A new approach asks: what if we could supercharge a patient's own immune system to fight back? A Phase 2 study tested this idea in 220 people with metastatic melanoma. The treatment, called Lifileucel, involved collecting a patient's tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) — immune cells already trying to attack the cancer — growing billions of them in a lab, and then infusing them back into the patient. Before the infusion, patients received a chemotherapy regimen to clear out some of their existing immune cells to make room for the new army. After the infusion, they got interleukin-2, a protein that helps immune cells grow. The study was sponsored by the company developing the therapy. It's important to note this is a mid-stage trial. We don't have the results yet on how many people responded to the treatment, how long any benefits lasted, or what side effects patients experienced. The findings will tell us if this complex, personalized approach is a path worth pursuing further.

What this means for you:
Early study tests using a patient's own immune cells to treat advanced melanoma.
Read the Full Clinical Summary →
View Original Abstract ↓
Status: COMPLETED | Phase: PHASE2 Condition(s): Metastatic Melanoma Intervention(s): Lifileucel (BIOLOGICAL) Prospective, interventional multicenter study evaluating adoptive cell therapy (ACT) via infusion of LN-144 (autologous TIL) followed by interleukin 2 (IL-2) after a nonmyeloablative lymphodepletion (NMA LD) preconditioning regimen. Detailed: Lifileucel is an autologous adoptive cell transfer therapy that utilizes a TIL manufacturing process, as originally developed by the NCI, for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma. The adoptive cell transfer therapy used in this study involves patients receiving a lymphocyte depleting preconditioning regimen, prior to infusion of autologous TIL, followed by the administration of a regimen of IL-2. Primary Outcome(s): Disease Assessment for Objective Response Rate Enrollment: 220 (ACTUAL) Lead Sponsor: Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc. Start: 2015-09-24 | Primary Completion: 2024-10-24 Results posted: 2025-12-09