Saturday, December 29, 2012

Cancer Kick ? Drug Shortage Linked To Cancer Relapse

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Academic Journal
Main Category: Lymphoma / Leukemia / Myeloma
Also Included In: Pediatrics / Children?s Health
Article Date: 27 Dec 2012 ? 12:00 PST

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A drug shortage appears to have caused a higher rate of relapse among children, teens and young adults with Hodgkin lymphoma, researchers form St. Jude Children?s Research Hospital reported this week. The scientists say this is the first example of the tragic consequences of the current drug shortage. They emphasized that protecting patient access to lifesaving treatment must always be the number one priority in any health care system.

Children, adolescents, and young adults with Hodgkin lymphoma in a national clinical trial showed an estimated two-year cancer-free survival rate that dropped from 88 to 75 percent due to a drug shortage.

The study began before any reported drug shortages, however, the change started in 2009 after a shortage of mechlorethamine became apparent. The drug mechlorethamine was replaced by cyclophosphamide for treatment of patients with middle or high risk Hodgkin lymphoma.

No study patients are deceased, but those who relapsed had more rigorous therapy that was linked with higher risks of infertility and other health issues later.

The results of comparing these two groups two years after their cancer diagnoses are published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The outcomes demonstrate the first available evidence of a drug shortage that resulted in disadvantages in specific patients.

History Of Drug Shortages

Recently, many caregivers and patients have had their medical treatments compromised by drug shortages, like mechlorethamine and other injectable drugs. Available since the 1960?s for cancer treatment, mechlorethamine just became obtainable again.

Cyclophosphamide is a safe and effective substitute for mechlorethamine, used for decades for treatment of children and adults with Hodgkin?s lymphoma.

Monika Metzger, M.D., an associate member of the St. Jude Department of Oncology and the study?s principal investigator, said:

?This is a devastating example of how drug shortages affect patients and why these shortages must be prevented. Our results demonstrate that, for many chemotherapy drugs, there are no adequate substitute drugs available.?

Previous shortages have most frequently been solved using substitutions. This study has given a real face to the drug shortage problem, showing that it is real. There are actual therapies that are unable to be given because drugs are just not available.

Michael Link, M.D., the senior author and professor of pediatrics in hematology-oncology at Stanford, as well as a member of the pediatric hematology-oncology service at Packard Children?s Hospital, explains:

?Despite heroic efforts by the drug shortage office of the Food and Drug Administration to solve the shortages of a number of medically necessary drugs, it is clear that patients are still suffering from the unavailability of life-saving drugs. A more systematic solution to the problem is needed.?

Results of Drug Substitutions

Hodgkin lymphoma is cancer that attacks the lymph system and makes up approximately six percent of childhood cancers. Around 90 percent of patients in the United States with this cancer will become long-term survivors.

In 2002, the five institutions collaborating on this study worked as the Pediatric Hodgkin Consortium and accepted a seven-drug chemotherapy treatment course, which included mechlorethamine, to treat high risk child patients. The researchers aimed to avoid infertility and other issues and maintain high cure rates.

In 2006, a companion study started for patients with intermediate-risk disease. The risk groups are defined by how far the cancer has spread, the location and number of lymph nodes involved, as well as the experience of negative symptoms like night sweats, fever, and weight loss.

Patients underwent 12 weeks of the seven-drug chemotherapy treatment course. They also received radiotherapy with their dose given in accordance to their chemotherapy response. Once mechlorethamine was no longer available, the substitution cyclophosphamide was allowed in its place.

Results for cancer patients are calculated in terms of cancer-free survival, also known as the number of years patients live disease-free. When investigators looked at the substitution?s influence, they saw that approximate disease-free survival was 88 percent for the 181 patients whose treatment included mechlorethamine.

For the 40 patients who were given cyclophosphamide, the rate was 75 percent. The variation prompted researchers to stop enrolling new patients in the trials.

As a whole, patients who had the cyclophosphamide experienced less negative symptoms and were more inclined to have intermediate-risk, rather than high-risk Hodgkin lymphoma. The authors note that there is no valid explanation for the significant difference in event-free survival besides the drug substitution.

The patients in the study were between the ages of 3 and 21, with half being under 14 years. Relapsed patients underwent additional therapy. Extra treatment included extensive chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant using the patient?s own blood-creating stem cells.

The investigators said it is too early to determine whether these patients will experience the same long-term survival rates as those who did not get their cancer back.

Written by Kelly Fitzgerald

Copyright: Medical News Today

Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Why the drug shortages?

posted by Penny Hood on 27 Dec 2012 at 6:34 pm

It seems remarkable that this article covers the devastating results of shortages without addressing the reasons for same. We have changed our priorities in health care from patients to profits, and many of these drugs that are no longer being made are simply not profitable ?enough?. How about an article that addresses the issues behind the shortages?

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insurance and rx companies

posted by art on 27 Dec 2012 at 5:32 pm

once again the profit motive drives corporate decision making parameters.
have they no shame, profits before young lives. this is why we need single payer health care in this country. insurances companies have no skin in the game. what if the us army was profit driven? the navy? we?d be drinking tea and eating sauerkraut.

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Drug Shortages and Bottom Lines

posted by Dick Brandlon on 27 Dec 2012 at 4:23 pm

The article didn?t mention the role of profitability in the drug ?shortages? that are ? or will be ? killing kids. If a drug company can?t make a pile out a drug, they don?t put in the time and effort that they would into a big money-maker. It?s part of our dollar-driven health system. Some countries put the health of the public ahead of more and bigger bonuses for the CEO ? but not here.
After all, where?s the bottom line in keeping even poor people healthy?

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drug shortages are causing disease

posted by Cynthia Gee on 27 Dec 2012 at 2:33 pm

Recently I was exposed to rabies, and had to undergo a series of immunizations. I became allergic to the drug that I was given, called Rabavert, and I now have bronchial asthma. There is another drug, Imovax,Novartis and Sanofi-Pasteur that would have been a better choice for me, given my propensity to allergies, but it is not currently available, and the manufacturers are not saying why, nor will they give a resupply date

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Why are there shortages

posted by Dennis Migneault on 27 Dec 2012 at 2:17 pm

This article fails to discuss why there are shortages. I worked for a major pharmaceutical company for 23 years and it was a cardinal rule never to be in an out of stock situation where patients needing drugs are impacted.

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Why the shortages?

posted by Melissa on 27 Dec 2012 at 1:24 pm

The article doesn?t explain why the drugs become unavailable. (Unless I missed something.) Do they lose their efficacy?

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why is there a shortage of the needed drugs

posted by Albert V. Bianchi on 27 Dec 2012 at 1:17 pm

I, as a former medical research scientist, am asking why is there a shortage of the needed drugs. I read the entire article, and did not see an explanation. I think it is important to tell people. AA

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MNT (logo) is the registered EU trade mark of MediLexicon Int. Limited.

Article source: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/254478.php

Source: http://cancerkick.com/2012/12/28/drug-shortage-linked-to-cancer-relapse/

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