medicine
Drug's Effect on Cancer Stuns
Doctors
By Marilyn Marchione
Associated Press Writer
May 16, 2005
CBN.com
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- No one could have been more surprised
than the doctors themselves. They were just hoping to relieve
the symptoms of a deadly blood disorder - and ended up treating
the disease itself. In nearly half of the people who took the
experimental drug, the cancer became undetectable.
Specialists said Revlimid now looks like a breakthrough and the
first effective treatment for many people with myelodysplastic
syndrome, or MDS, which is even more common than leukemia.
"It may be, if not eradicating the disease, putting it into
what I would call deep remission," said Dr. David Johnson,
a cancer specialist at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center who is
familiar with but had no role in the research.
Revlimid "is not yet on the market but almost certainly
will be" because of these findings, he said.
MDS refers to a group of disorders caused by the bone marrow
not making enough healthy, mature blood cells. About 15,000 to
20,000 new cases are diagnosed each year in the United States,
and as many as 50,000 Americans have it now. They usually suffer
anemia and fatigue and need blood transfusions about every eight
weeks to stay alive.
"It's a serious problem, it tends to occur in older people,
and it's fatal for most," said Dr. Herman Kattlove, a blood
disorder specialist at the American Cancer Society.
Revlimid is similar to thalidomide, a drug notorious for the
birth defects it caused decades ago but that in recent years has
proved effective against another blood cancer, multiple myeloma.
Researchers don't really know how it works other than that it
boosts the immune system in a number of ways.
In small studies, Revlimid also showed promise and with far fewer
side effects. In a new study, doctors tested it on 115 people
with MDS who have the most common chromosome abnormality that
causes the disease.
After about six months on the drug, 66 percent no longer needed
blood transfusions, said the study's leader, Dr. Alan List of
the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Fla. A year later,
three-fourths of them still don't need transfusions.
But the big surprise was that signs of the genetic mutation fueling
the disease diminished in 81 patients and vanished in 51.
"The chromosome abnormality completely disappeared, something
we've never seen before" from a drug aimed just at boosting
red blood cells, List said.
Dr. Bruce Johnson of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston
compared it with what doctors saw in early tests of the drug Gleevec
on people with chronic myelogenous leukemia several years ago.
"If you extrapolate what they saw, it's one of the signs
for long remission," he said of the abnormality's disappearance.
Dr. Jasmine Zain, a blood specialist from the City of Hope Cancer
Center in New York, said the results warrant further testing on
the drug.
"Nowhere do you see 60 to 70 percent responses," she
said.
About one-third of people on the drug had temporary drops in
other blood cells and clotting components, fixed by briefly interrupting
treatment or lowering the dose.
The study was sponsored by Celgene Corp., which makes Revlimid.
List is a consultant for the company and reported results Sunday
at a meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Orlando.
In other news at the conference:
- A five-year study of cancer care in America concluded that
most people get good care but that quality differs from region
to region.
The oncology society commissioned the study by Harvard University
and the RAND Corporation after a 2000 Institute of Medicine report
said that not all Americans were getting good cancer care and
that this seemed to be a substantial problem.
Researchers measured more than 100 factors affecting breast and
colon cancer care, such as whether women were appropriately prescribed
tamoxifen and whether radiation doses were correct. They concluded
that 86 percent of people with breast cancer and 78 percent with
colon cancer got good care, higher than what other studies have
found for other diseases.
However, "these numbers range all over the place" for
the five cities studied - Atlanta, Cleveland, Houston, Kansas
City and Los Angeles - said Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, a National Institutes
of Health physician who headed the study. (Individual measures
for each city were not released).
- Another study found that surgery and follow-up tests for stomach
cancer are inadequate in most U.S. hospitals. Three out of four
patients don't have enough lymph nodes removed to check for cancer,
and this made a big impact on survival rates, said Dr. Natalie
Coburn of Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto who used a federal
cancer database for her study.
Five-year survival was more than twice as high in Hawaii than
in Utah, where surgery was poorest.
"I'm not suggesting you fly from Utah to Hawaii to have
your surgery done," but patients need to know the qualifications
of their surgeon, said Dr. David Johnson, who is president of
the oncology society.
"If that's true for gastric cancer, we know it's true for
other cancers like lung surgery, breast surgery and the like,"
he added.
Nearly 22,000 new cases of stomach cancer and 11,550 deaths are
expected in the United States this year.
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On the Net:
Cancer meeting: http:www.PLWC.org, http:www.asco.org
© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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