Monday, June 4, 2012MedlinePlus
By Deena BeasleyCHICAGO (Reuters) - Cancer drug applications at the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration are rising, with 20 submissions expected this year, as
a better understanding of the molecular makeup of the disease leads to new
treatments.Some of the novel techniques that are proving to be successful
include targeting specific gene mutations in tumors and harnessing the body's
own immune system to seek out and kill cancer cells."There are a large
number of drugs being developed in oncology," said Dr. Richard Pazdur,
head of the FDA's office of oncology products. "There is greater
understanding of some of the disease processes."Last year, 10 out of 30
new drugs approved by the FDA were for treatment of cancer."This year we
expect over 20 oncology applications will be filed," Pazdur said in an
interview at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago .In terms of
approvals, he said some will have decision deadlines that fall into next year
or could take longer than expected to review due to issues such as
manufacturing, while some may not be approved at all.So far this year, cancer
drugs approved by the FDA include Roche's Erivedge for basal cell carcinoma;
Pfizer's Inlyta for kidney cancer; GlaxoSmithKline's Votrient for soft tissue
sarcoma; and Leo Pharma's Picato for actinic keratosis.The agency is slated to
decide by Friday on Roche's application for pertuzumab, an antibody designed
for use in the 25 percent or so of breast cancer patients whose tumors generate
a protein called HER-2, which can fuel cancer growth.Over the past year, the
FDA has cleared several cancer drugs ahead of its legislated deadline."It
is much easier to approve drugs that have greater efficacy," Pazdur said.
"Our staff is interested getting the drugs out earlier ... it has to be
drug that we really think is important."
BETTER SURVIVALOncology drugs are unique in that the regulatory emphasis is on
effectiveness rather than safety because patients are often so gravely ill."In
oncology, the greatest difficulty has been the efficacy issue," Pazdur
said. "We are starting to see new drugs with important survival
advantages."That does not mean, however, that every cancer drug to go
before the FDA is a slam-dunk if a clinical trial demonstrates a statistically
significant benefit for patients.The issue is particularly sensitive for drug
trials designed to show an improvement in "progression-free
survival," defined as the length of time a patient lives without their
cancer getting worse. Cancer drug trials with PFS as their goal are usually
much shorter than studies looking at the rate of overall survival for patients
treated with an experimental drug."It isn't just statistical significance.
That gets you in the door," Pazdur said. "You could overpower the
trial -- and we have seen it -- to have a trivial improvement in PFS."The
FDA last year revoked its conditional approval of Roche's Avastin as a
treatment for breast cancer because, although there was evidence that it slowed
progression of the disease, there was no conclusive data showing that it
extended the lives of breast cancer patients. The drug is still approved for
glioblastoma, colorectal, lung and kidney cancers.Pazdur said the FDA is
chiefly focused on the magnitude of improvement demonstrated in a clinical
trial."There is a big difference between a 10 percent improvement in PFS
and a 60 percent improvement," Pazdur said.He also said there is now more
emphasis at the FDA on meeting with drug developers earlier and more
frequently."When we are seeing drugs with a high degree of efficacy --
so-called 'breakthrough' drugs -- it requires a different interaction with the
companies," Pazdur said. "We may change the registration strategy or
the size of the trial."(Reporting By Deena Beasley; Editing by Michele
Gershberg and Maureen Bavdek)Reuters Health
'Uncertainty' Remains Over Supply
of Key Cancer DrugsWhile shortage of generics has eased, more must be done to prevent future
shortfalls, experts sayMonday, June 4, 2012Cancer Chemotherapy MedicinesMONDAY,
June 4 (HealthDay News) -- John Mahan, a 58-year-old Nashville firefighter
battling a gastrointestinal cancer, couldn't believe what he was hearing last
July.His doctor had just told him that his clinic had run out of injectable
fluorouracil (5-FU), the generic chemotherapy Mahan needed to keep his tumor at
bay."My initial reaction was, 'you've got to be kidding, right?'" he
said.Unfortunately, the news was all too real. Mahan was switched to another
drug, capecitabine. Taken in pill form, it had the same anti-cancer
effectiveness as 5-FU but with more onerous side effects."It made me feel
bad, weak," Mahan said, "just run down, feeling tired all of the
time, loss of appetite."At a Monday news briefing at the annual meeting of
the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Chicago , Mahan spoke on behalf of the
thousands of cancer patients who have been hit hard by the recent nationwide
shortages of generic, injectable cancer drugs.The crisis peaked earlier this
year when children with a leading form of childhood cancer, acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (ALL), were faced with a looming shortage of a lifesaving drug,
methotrexate. Quick action on the part of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, the pharmaceutical industry and others averted that shortage,
but deficits in this and other cancer medicines are still possible, experts
warn."The good news has been that the frequency of the drug shortages has
begun to decline for a variety of reasons," Dr. Richard Schilsky, chair of
ASCO's government relations committee, told reporters. "But there is still
an unpredictable availability of many drugs and we are never sure exactly when
a generic drug is suddenly going to go out of supply. That creates a tremendous
amount of uncertainty -- anxiety for our patients and great difficulty in
planning if you're a physician."Overall, 22 crucial oncology therapies
have recently been in short supply, noted ASCO President Dr. Michael Link. Of
most concern right now, he said, are shortages of a handful of medicines:
•Methotrexate -- while there is currently an
adequate supply of methotrexate for ALL and other cancers, there is now a
shortage of a compound needed for patients who require high-dose infusions of
the drug, Link said.
•5-FU -- gaps in supply remain for this
mainstay generic medicine, used to fight cancers of the colon, pancreas,
head-and-neck and other sites.
•Nitrogen mustard -- one of the earliest
anti-cancer therapies developed, it remains essential to care of lymphomas and
Hodgkin's disease. "It has been unavailable for some time," Link
said, and there are no really good substitutes.
•Paclitaxel (Taxol) -- periods of short supply continue for this key treatment for breast
cancer and other malignancies."Hearing from our members, we are learning that
the shortages are most acute among community practices where the majority of
adult patients are cared for," Link added. Smaller centers may not have
the buying clout that larger, academic medical centers might have, leaving them
more vulnerable to shortages, he explained.These drug shortages typically occur
among sterile injectable cancer medications that have gone to cheaper, generic
status. The experts gathered at the meeting noted that the world's supply of
generic medications is now concentrated in only about six companies that may
produce dozens or hundreds of drugs."So, for example if one company makes
30 products and they have a problem, suddenly 30 products are at risk of a
shortage," explained Dr. Sandra Kweder, deputy director of the Office of
New Drugs at the FDA. Producing highly sophisticated, sterile injectables is a
particularly complicated process, she said, and quality issues can arise that
cause plants to be temporarily shut down while the issue is resolved.In many
cases, these safety issues are not minor ones, Kweder noted, and can include
"particles of glass or metal shavings" found in vials that, of
course, pose safety issues for patients.But, why the shortages now? According
to Kweder, it's not that new, tougher quality-control rules have come into
place recently. Instead, a host of popular drugs have recently gone off-patent
and "what we've seen is great growth in the generic world," she said.
As more generics get produced at more production facilities, "we are just
seeing more in terms of problems in that manufacturing," Kweder said. Many
companies are now modernizing their production facilities, she said, but that
will take time.According to Kweder, the FDA, in close consultation with drug
companies, has already prevented about 150 drug shortages since October of last
year, when President Barack Obama signed a special Executive Order demanding
action on the issue. As companies gave FDA early warning of looming problems,
the agency and the pharmaceutical industry worked together to find alternate
sources of supply, including imports from abroad, Kweder said.Methotrexate, the
drug needed by children with leukemia, "continues to be very carefully
monitored," Kweder said. "We expect the [shortage of] the injectable
that has been difficult for some practices to obtain to be resolved within the
next month completely."Progress is taking place at the Congressional level
as well, the experts said, as a bill makes its way through the House and Senate
that would mandate that generic drug makers give the FDA six months advance
notice of any possible production problems.The bill, which has the full support
of ASCO, also includes a provision that generics makers would pay the FDA a
user fee, aimed at speeding oversight and approval for new generics.All of this
gives some comfort to Mahan, whose cancer has progressed but is being held in
check by a new course of therapy. Still, he worries about other patients who
may be facing the same dilemmas he did."Until this impacts you personally,"
he said, "most people aren't even aware that there's even a shortage going
on."SOURCES: June 4, 2012, press briefing, annual meeting of the American
Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), Chicago, with: John Mahan, Nashville;
Richard Schilsky, M.D., chair, government relations committee, ASCO, and chief,
hematology/oncology, University of Chicago School of Medicine; Michael Link,
M.D., president, ASCO, Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile
Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford, Calif.; Rear Admiral Sandra Kweder,
M.D., deputy director, Office of New Drugs, U.S. Food and Drug Administration
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