Slightly off my own treatment but it demonstrates the potential of immunology. Bioceptre's approach is similar but they have identified a generic marker which can be found on many cancer cells which would make it a suitable treatment for multiple cancer types.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21729104.100-gene-therapy-cures-leukaemia-in-eight-days.html#.UuVHYvY1h0s
WITHIN just eight days of starting a novel gene 
therapy, David Aponte's "incurable" leukaemia had vanished. For four 
other patients, the same happened within eight weeks, although one later
 died from a blood clot unrelated to the treatment, and another after 
relapsing.
The cured trio, who were all previously 
diagnosed with usually fatal relapses of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, 
have now been in remission for between 5 months and 2 years. Michel Sadelain
 of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, co-leader of
 the group that designed the trial, says that a second trial of 50 
patients is being readied, and the team is looking into using the 
technique to treat other cancers.
The key to the new therapy is identifying a
 molecule unique to the surface of cancer cells, then genetically 
engineering a patient's immune cells to attack it.
In acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, immune 
cells called B-cells become malignant. The team were able to target a 
surface molecule known as CD19 that is only present on B-cells. Doctors 
extracted other immune cells called T-cells from the patients. These 
were treated with a harmless virus, which installed a new gene 
redirecting them to attack all cells bearing CD19. When the engineered 
T-cells were reinfused into the patients, they rapidly killed all 
B-cells, cancerous or otherwise.
"The stunning finding was that in all five patients, tumours were undetectable after the treatment," says Sadelain.
He reckons that the body should replenish 
the immune system with regular T-cells and healthy B-cells after a 
couple of months. However, the patients received donated bone marrow to 
ensure they could regrow a healthy immune system (Science Translational Medicine, doi.org/kwz).
The treatment is not the first to 
re-engineer T-cells to attack a form of leukaemia. Last year, an 
international company called Adaptimmune used the approach to treat 13 
people with multiple myeloma – it left 10 in remission.
"Although it's early days for these 
trials, the approach of modifying a patient's T-cells to attack their 
cancer is looking increasingly like one that will, in time, have a place
 alongside more traditional treatments," says Paul Moss of Cancer 
Research UK.
Sadelain's team is now investigating the 
scope for attacking other cancers. Where no single surface molecule is 
unique to a cancer, he is seeking to target pairs of molecules that only
 occur together on cancer cells. In January, he demonstrated this 
approach by wiping out human prostate tumours implanted in mice, using 
T-cells engineered to target two surface molecules (Nature Biotechnology, doi.org/kw2).
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