'Breast cancer drug extends lives of patients'
A drug used to treat advanced breast cancer has had what appears to be
unprecedented success in prolonging lives in a clinical trial, researchers
reported on Sunday.
Patients who received the drug - Perjeta, from the Swiss drug maker
Roche — had a median survival time nearly 16 months longer than those in the
control group.
That is the longest amount of time for a drug used as an initial
treatment for metastatic breast cancer, the researchers said, and it may be one
of the longest for the treatment of any cancer. Most cancer drugs prolong
survival in patients with metastatic disease for a few months at most.
Metastasis means the cancer has spread to other parts of the body.
"We've never seen anything like this before," said Dr Sandra M
Swain of the MedStar Washington Hospital Center in Washington, the lead author
of the study. "It's really unprecedented to have this survival
benefit."
The results were being presented on Sunday in Madrid at the annual
meeting of the European Society for Medical Oncology. Dr Swain has been a paid
speaker for the company.
Previous analyzes of the clinical trial established that Perjeta, known
generically as pertuzumab, increased survival by a statistically significant
amount. But until now it was not known by how much, because patients had not
been followed long enough. Two experts not involved in the study, Dr Edith A
Perez of the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla, and Dr Harold J Burstein of the
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, said the results were impressive.
"Usually we see two months of improvement," Dr Perez said.
Perjeta, like the better-known Roche drug Herceptin, or trastuzumab,
blocks the action of a protein called HER2, which spurs the growth of some
breast tumours. Perjeta is meant to be used with Herceptin for the roughly 20
percent of breast cancers characterized by an abundance of HER2.
Perjeta was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2012 and is
already considered the standard of care in the United States.
Still, the results could lead to increased use of the drug. Only about
half of the eligible women are being treated with the drug in the United
States, according to Edward Lang Jr, a spokesman for Roche. And doctors say use
is lower in many countries where cost is more of an issue.In the US, Perjeta
costs about $5,900 a month and Herceptin about $5,300 a month, Mr. Lang said.
He said Perjeta was priced lower than some other new cancer medicines because
it has to be used with Herceptin. Some recently approved cancer drugs cost more
than $10,000 a month.
Roche reported Perjeta sales of 388 million Swiss francs, or about $408
million, in the first half of this year, with about $250 million of that coming
from the US. The trial, sponsored by Roche, involved 808 patients around the
world with previously untreated HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer. Half of
them received Perjeta, Herceptin and the chemotherapy drug docetaxel. The other
half received Herceptin, docetaxel and a placebo in place of Perjeta.
The median survival time for those who received Perjeta was 56.5 months,
or about four and a half years, compared with 40.8 months for those in the
control group, a difference of 15.7 months. By another measure, known as the
hazard ratio, use of Perjeta reduced the risk of dying 32 per cent.
Use of Perjeta delayed the progression or worsening of the cancer only
about six months in the trial. Experts said it was not clear why the drug
extended lives so much longer than that.
Those receiving Perjeta had higher rates of diarrhea and rash and a
lowering of white blood cell counts. The labels for both Perjeta and Herceptin
contain warnings that the drugs can cause cardiac dysfunction and heart
failure. But in the study, patients who received Perjeta did not experience any
more of these problems than those in the control group.
Dr Perez and Dr. Burstein, the experts not involved in the study, said
in separate interviews that they were also cheered by a nearly 41-month median
survival in the control group. When Herceptin was approved in the late 1990s,
people taking that drug lived a median of about 25 months. The experts said
doctors now use Herceptin for a longer time and can better manage patients.
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