Guest guest Posted June 14, 2006 Report Share Posted June 14, 2006 New leukemia drugs show early promise By Gene Emery BOSTON (Reuters) - Two new drugs may help treat some adult cases of leukemia that fail to respond to Novartis AG's Gleevec, two studies showed on Wednesday. One drug, dasatinib, an experimental Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. drug recently endorsed by a Food & Drug Administration advisory panel, could receive full approval by the end of June. Dasatinib helped 68 out of 84 volunteers suffering from a form of chronic myeloid leukemia, or CML, that was resistant to Novartis's Gleevec, according one study led by Sawyers of the University of California in Los Angeles. Using genetic testing, the Sawyers team also predicted which patients would respond to the drug, also known as Sprycel, said the study published in The New England Journal of Medicine. The second study, also published in the Journal, evaluated nilotinib, which Novartis is trying to put on a fast track for approval in the United States. Europe has already given nilotinib orphan drug status -- a designation for drugs developed for rare illnesses where there is no strong profit motive to make the drugs. CML is relatively rare, striking about 4,600 people a year in the United States. The study found that 11 of 12 volunteers who received the drug in the long-term chronic stage of the disease had cancer cells disappear from the blood. This is positive but does not necessarily mean they were cured since cancer cells can lurk elsewhere in the body. In the " blast " stage, which is the most aggressive phase of CML, cancer cells also disappeared from the blood of 13 out of 33 patients. For the less-aggressive " accelerated " phase, 33 of 46 responded. " With it, I believe we are going to make another quantum leap in the treatment of CML, " said author Hagop Kantarjian of the University of Texas M.D. Cancer Center, referring to nilotinib. Nilotinib is designed to be 50 times more potent than Gleevec but it seems to spark some worrisome abnormal electrical activity in the heart, the study said. Further tests are also needed because neither drug was given a head-to-head comparison with other treatment. The studies " provide immediate hope for patients in whom CML cells have developed resistance, " said Druker of the Oregon Health and Science University Cancer Institute in Portland, in a Journal editorial. The Sawyers team said successful long-term treatment of CML might require a combination of such drugs, just as the AIDS virus is best battled with several medicines given concurrently. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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