Guest guest Posted April 20, 2007 Report Share Posted April 20, 2007 Trial of Amgen Drug May Dispel Some Safety Concerns By ANDREW POLLACK Published: April 20, 2007 In an announcement that could dispel at least some of the recent safety concerns over a widely used class of drugs, Amgen said yesterday that its anemia drug Aranesp did not increase the death rate of lung cancer patients in a closely watched clinical trial. In the trial, which involved 600 patients with small-cell lung cancer who were receiving chemotherapy, there was essentially no difference in survival between those who received Aranesp and those who received a placebo. The drug maker Roche, however, has ended a clinical trial with lung cancer patients that compared Aranesp with an anemia drug it is developing because of an unexpected number of deaths in at least some of the treatment groups, a Roche spokeswoman confirmed yesterday. Aranesp, along with Epogen from Amgen and Procrit from & , are used by nearly a million Americans a year, mainly to treat anemia from kidney disease or cancer chemotherapy. Combined sales of the three drugs were nearly $10 billion last year. Aranesp and Epogen together accounted for $6.6 billion of Amgen's $14.3 billion in 2006 revenue. www.nytimes.com/2007/04/20/business/20amgen.html?ref=health Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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