Guest guest Posted June 8, 2011 Report Share Posted June 8, 2011 This article from yesterday's Wall Street Journal may be of interest to some of you. I'm due for proton radiation treatment no. 25 of 45 today at Loma University Medical Center in California and it's going very well--no significant side effects, no pain, and no discomfort. --Milt Baker, diagnosed Jan. 31, 2011 Bayer Drug Shows Promise in Treating Prostate Cancer By RON WINSLOW And JONATHAN D. ROCKOFF Bayer AG said positive results for an experimental prostate-cancer drug could speed the drug's path to approval in an increasingly crowded market. Bayer's Alpharadin, which emits alpha radiation, would be the fourth new drug since early last year to reach the market for advanced prostate cancer, a lethal condition for which few effective treatments previously existed. Wall Street expects the world-wide market for prostate-cancer therapies, now estimated to approach $1 billion, to grow to $5 billion by 2015 as a result of the influx of new treatments, according to Morningstar Inc. Those already available are Dendreon Corp.'s Provenge, Jevtana from Sanofi SA and & 's Zytiga. " We're just seeing a tremendous amount of new treatments coming out, " said Damien Conover, a Morningstar pharmaceuticals analyst. While some competition for the market is likely, prostate-cancer experts said each of the agents works differently against the disease, suggesting that they may be used either sequentially or in combination to mount the most effective assault on the disease. Alpharadin, or radium-223 chloride, specifically targets cancer that has spread to the bone. Bayer said the injectable drug was being studied in a 922-patient randomized study. A planned interim safety check found that the study had achieved its goal of showing an improvement in overall survival. The study was halted so that patients in the study who were assigned to placebo could be switched over to the treatment. The analysis showed median survival was 14 months for those on Alpharadin, compared with 11.2 months for those on placebo, according to Bayer. Both groups also were given standard chemotherapy. Complete data from the study will be presented at an upcoming scientific meeting, the company said. " The results are modest, " said Philip Kantoff, director of the genitourinary oncology program at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, who wasn't involved with the study. " But from a paradigm standpoint, this is interesting. " Alpha radiation is a potent form of radiation that travels short distances and in particular targets cancer at bone sites, Dr. Kantoff said. The study supports the idea that a survival benefit can be achieved by attacking cancer that has spread to the bone. These bone metastases are the main cause of painful symptoms and death among patients with advanced prostate cancer whose disease has progressed despite standard hormonal treatments. Zytiga and Jevtana also work, in part, by targeting prostate cancer that has spread to the bone, but by different mechanisms, and are approved for patients after chemotherapy has failed to control their disease. Provenge works by boosting the immune system and is approved for patients before they are treated with chemotherapy. Each of the drugs is " pegged at different time points along the cascade " of prostate cancer's progression, said Yee, biotech analyst at RBC Capital Markets. " The patient wins here because there are so many new options available. " Other options are in the wings. Medivation Inc. has a drug in late-stage development. And on Monday, Exelixis Inc. reported promising results from a midstage, or Phase II, study of its drug cabozantinib, in advanced prostate cancer. The news, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago, was offset by a report of six deaths related to the drug from a separate trial. sey, president and chief executive officer of Exelixis, said the deaths, involving 1.2% of patients, " were completely in line " with findings of other similar drugs that are already on the market for other cancers. The company plans to launch a late-stage study of cabozantinib in prostate cancer in the second half of this year. †" Sten Stovall and Harriet Torry contributed to this article. Write to Ron Winslow at Ron.Winslow@... and D. Rockoff at .Rockoff@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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