A new form of drug drastically improves survival rates of younger women
with the most common type of breast cancer, researchers said on
Saturday, citing the results of an international clinical trial. PHOTO |
FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
A new form of drug drastically improves survival rates of
younger women with the most common type of breast cancer, researchers
said on Saturday, citing the results of an international clinical trial.
The
findings, presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of
Clinical Oncology in Chicago, showed that the addition of cell-cycle
inhibitor ribociclib increased survival rates to 70 percent after three
and a half years.
The mortality rate was 29 per cent less than when patients, all under 59 and pre-menopausal, were randomly assigned a placebo.
Lead
author Sara Hurvitz told AFP the study focused on a form of breast
cancer which is fuelled by the hormone oestrogen and which accounts for
two-thirds of all cases among younger women.
It is generally treated by therapies that block the hormone's production.
"You
actually can get synergy, or a better response, better cancer kill, by
adding one of these cell-cycle inhibitors" on top of the hormone
blocking therapy, said Hurvitz.
HOW IT WORKS
The drug works by inhibiting the activity of cancer-cell promoting enzymes.
The
treatment is less toxic than traditional chemotherapy because it more
selectively targets cancerous cells, blocking their ability to multiply.
An
estimated 268,000 new cases of breast cancer are expected to be
diagnosed in women in the US in 2019, while the advanced form of the
disease is the leading cause of cancer deaths among women aged 20 to 59.
Though
advanced breast cancer is less common among younger women, its
incidence grew two percent per year in the US between 1978 and 2008 for
women aged 20 to 39, according to a previous study.
The
new trial, which looked at more than 670 cases, included only women who
had advanced cancer -- stage four -- for which they had not received
prior hormone-blocking therapy.
"These
are patients who tend to be diagnosed later, at a later stage in their
disease, because we don't have great screening modalities for young
women," said Hurvitz.
In addition, patients who develop breast cancer early tend to have more complex cases.
"That's
what makes us so excited, because it's a therapy that's affecting so
many patients with advanced disease," added Hurvitz.
ADMINISTERED DAILY
A
pill is administered daily for 21 days followed by seven days off to
allow the body time to recover, since two-thirds of patients have a
moderate to severe drop in white cell count.
Jamie
Bennett, a spokeswoman for Novartis, which markets the drug under the
brand name Kisqali and funded the research, said it cost $12,553 for a
28-day dose.
But, she added, "the
majority of patients in the US with commercial insurance will pay $0 per
month for their Kisqali prescription."
There
is no cure for metastatic breast cancer and the majority of the women
on the drug will require some form of therapy for the rest of their
lives.
Oncologist Harold Burstein,
who was not involved in the research, said it was "an important study,"
having established that the use of the drug "translates into a
significant survival benefit for women."
Burstein is with the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.
"Hopefully,
these data will enable access for this product for more women around
the world, particularly in healthcare systems which assess value
rigorously as part of their decisions for national access to drugs,"
Burstein added.
Moving forward,
Hurvitz said she was interested in investigating whether ribociclib
could help nip cancer in the bud at an earlier stage.
"We
want to go and look at those women diagnosed with early stage disease,
small tumours, tumours that haven't gone to the lymph nodes or haven't
gone to other parts of the body and see if we can stop it from returning
later from metastasizing," she said.
The enrolment phase of new global clinical trial is now underway.
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