Guest guest Posted May 30, 2010 Report Share Posted May 30, 2010 BlankChemo for life? Sunday, 30 May 2010 There is an emerging trend in oncology to keep patients on anticancer drugs for longer period, even for years at a stretch. This concept was given support from two studies to be presented at the 2010 annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO). Both studies show that patients who received long-term treatment for multiple myeloma and follicular lymphoma remained free of disease progression longer than patients who were taken off their treatment once the disease was in remission. The first study was of the drug lenalinomide (Revlemid) given after stem-cell transplant. It cut the recurrence rate of a cancer of the bone marrow known as multiple myeloma. After three years, the study showed that 68 percent of patients who took lenalinomide were free of disease progression. This compared to 35 percent of those who only received a placebo drug. " This is of major clinical important for patients, " Attal of Purpan Hospital, Toulouse, France told the New York Times (Pollack 2010). In the second study, two years of maintenance with the drug rituximab (Rituxan) similarly cut the risk of recurrence among patients with follicular lymphoma (a type of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma) in half. The New York Times raised three concerns about this type of maintenance therapy. First, the data does not reveal whether such treatment improved the rate of overall survival in such patients. This is key. Both multiple myeloma and follicular lymphoma are diseases in which people often live a decade or more post-diagnosis. So it is too early to say if longevity is truly being increased, or if doctors are simply changing the shape of the curve leading to the patient's demise. Second, we do not know what the adverse effects would be of taking these drugs for long periods of time. These drugs have many possible side effects, and some of these might reveal themselves only after prolonged use. Finally, the cost of maintenance therapy could be very high for the individual and for society. Two years of maintenance with rituximab is $50,000. Lenalidomide costs even more, about $6,000 per month (Pollack 2010). Think about the implications of this. In 2009 there were 20,580 new US cases of multiple myeloma (ACS 2009). If each of these patients received rituximab for a two years, this would cost society about $1 billion. Follicular lymphoma is the most common form of lymphoma About 30 percent of low-grade lymphomas are of this type. If we estimate about 20,000 US cases of follicular cancers per year, then that would also cost $1 billion per yearly cohort. But as each year's new cohort of NHL patients would need to be similarly treated, it would add additional billions in cost (and in chemotherapy sales). As the late Sen. Everett Dirksen once said, in a different context: " A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon it adds up to real money. " --Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. References: American Cancer Society (ACS), 2009 Cancer Facts and Figures. Available at: http://www.cancer.org Pollack, . Study finds certain drugs can keep some forms of cancer in remission longer. New York Times, May 20, 2010. Follicular lymphoma occurrence: http://tinyurl.com/338svyu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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