4t.Two years and eight months after his diagnosis, the scans now show what everyone prayed for: completely clear.

A breakthrough drug is fighting brain cancer head-on.

Glioblastoma is widely considered the deadliest form of brain cancer, killing over 10,000 Americans each year. There is no cure for the highly aggressive disease — many patients survive just nine months after diagnosis.

Ben Trotman with wife Emily and daughter Mabel
Ben Trotman was diagnosed with glioblastoma in October 2022 at just 40 years old. Marie Mangan

Treatment focuses on managing symptoms and extending life via surgery to remove as much of the tumor as possible and radiation therapy and chemotherapy to destroy cancer cells.

Now, researchers from University College London Hospitals (UCLH) are recruiting glioblastoma patients for a trial of the immunotherapy drug ipilimumab. Sold under the brand name Yervoy, the monoclonal antibody stimulates the immune system to recognize and attack cancer cells.

Oncologists are optimistic since a 43-year-old UK father shows no signs of having a tumor — he took ipilimumab before his glioblastoma treatment.

“The crucial element of this trial is that patients will have their immune system boosted by the drug before they have any other treatment, when they are fit and well enough to tolerate the immunotherapy,” said Dr. Paul Mulholland, the consultant medical oncologist leading the trial.

“We saw with Ben, the one patient recruited to the immunotherapy study, NeAT-GLIO, that he has had clear scans since having the treatment and the tumor hasn’t returned more than two and a half years later.”

Doctor studying glioblastoma using a brain model and medical tools.
Glioblastoma is widely considered the deadliest form of brain cancer, killing over 10,000 Americans each year. H_Ko – stock.adobe.com

Ben Trotman was diagnosed with glioblastoma in October 2022 at just 40 years old.

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Trotman met with Mulholland, who enrolled him in a clinical trial for ipilimumab. He was the first patient in the world — and the only person in the trial — to take the drug before glioblastoma treatment.

“Getting this diagnosis was the most traumatic experience,” said Trotman’s wife, Emily.

“We were grappling with the fact that Ben had gone from being apparently perfectly healthy to having months to live.”

After taking the drug, Ben underwent radiotherapy and chemotherapy.

Two years and eight months later, his scans are clear.

“It is very unusual to have a clear scan with glioblastoma, especially when he didn’t have the follow-up surgery that had been planned to remove all of the tumor that was initially visible on scans,” Mulholland said.

Bride and groom walking down a path after their wedding.
Ben and Emily Trotman wed in 2023, after he began his immunotherapy treatment. Courtesy of UCLH

“We hope that the immunotherapy and follow-up treatment Ben has had will hold his tumor at bay,” he added, “and it has so far, which we are delighted to see.”

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Elizabeth Craig.

In January 2023, months after his diagnosis, Ben married Emily. The couple welcomed a daughter, Mabel, earlier this year.

They enjoy taking her for walks along with their rescue dog, Jerry.

“We are trying to live as normal a life as possible,” Emily said.

“We are in a unique position of which there is no precedent and which comes with a great deal of uncertainty,” she continued. “We want to live each day as if it were our last, but we also want to plan for the future, which we hope to have.”

Researchers plan to recruit 16 glioblastoma patients like Ben over 18 months.

After taking ipilimumab, the trial participants will undergo radiotherapy and chemotherapy and perhaps surgery depending on the extent of their disease.

Portrait of Dr. Paul Mulholland and Dame Siobhain McDonagh MP.
Dr. Paul Mulholland (left) is pictured with Dame Siobhain McDonagh, who raised funds for the new clinical trial of ipilimumab. Marie Mangan

The trial is being funded by Dame Siobhain McDonagh, a member of the British Parliament, whose sister died of glioblastoma in 2023.

“My beloved sister Margaret was appalled to discover that there had been no advances in brain cancer treatment for decades when she was diagnosed with glioblastoma,” McDonagh said.

“Changing this was Margaret’s final campaign and one that I have continued in her memory.”

Treatment will take place at the NIHR UCLH’s Clinical Research Facility at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.

“I am delighted that this new trial, with the same immunotherapy drug I received, is going ahead and others will have the opportunity to take part,” Ben said. “It will give people newly diagnosed with glioblastoma some hope.”

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