Cancer drug Avastin loses US approval
Washington, Nov 19: US drug regulators have rescinded approval of a breast cancer drug, saying it is not effective enough to justify the risks of taking it.
The drug, Avastin, was approved for US use in 2008, but UK officials have also rejected claims that it prolongs life.
Further research showed it did not help patients live longer or improve quality of life, Food and Drug Administration commissioner Margaret Hamburg said.
Avastin will still be used to treat other kinds of cancer.
The drug is used to treat breast cancer that has spread to other parts of the body. It works by starving cancer cells of a blood supply.
However, its side-effects include severe high blood pressure, massive bleeding, heart attack or heart failure and tears in the stomach and intestines, FDA studies have found.
FDA approval of the drug had initially been given under a special programme that allows patients to start using promising treatments while the manufacturer finishes the studies to prove the medicine works as well as expected.
The decision to withdraw the approval - which can happen if results of the research do not match predictions - was not easy, the FDA said.
"With so much at stake, patients and their doctors count on the FDA to ensure the drugs they use have been shown to be safe and effective for their intended use. Sometimes, the results of rigorous testing can be disappointing," Ms Hamburg told the Associated Press news agency.
Some advocates of the drug disagree with the watchdog's decision.
"The bottom line is that they are throwing out the baby with the bathwater. There absolutely may be subsets of carefully chosen breast cancer patients who benefit from Avastin," said Dr Elisa Port, co-director of the Dubin Breast Center of Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.
Roche, the Swiss manufacturer of the drug, has said it will undertake further study of the treatment, especially with the chemotherapy drug paclitaxel, to try to identify which patients might be best suited to benefit from use of the drug.
The company says it expects the medicine will generate $7.6bn (£4.8m) of revenue annually, despite the FDA decision.
The drug was approved on the basis of a study that showed Avastin was able to stall the growth of breast cancer by five-and-a-half months, when used together with a standard chemotherapy treatment.
But subsequent studies revised the period of delay to between one and three months, and there was no evidence to show that the drug extended patients' lives.
The US decision comes after Avastin fell foul of health authorities in the UK and in Europe.
In February 2011, the UK's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), the NHS drugs advisory body, said Avastin should not be used to treat secondary breast cancers.
NICE, which issues guidance for NHS in England and Wales, said there was insufficient evidence that the drug prolonged life.
This guidance followed a recommendation by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) that doctors only prescribe the drug in combination with the taxane drug, paclitaxel.
COURTESY: BBC
Lastupdate on : Sat, 19 Nov 2011 21:30:00 Makkah time
Lastupdate on : Sat, 19 Nov 2011 18:30:00 GMT
Lastupdate on : Sun, 20 Nov 2011 00:00:00 IST
- MORE FROM NEWS
- Kashmir
7 medical shops sealed
‘Don’t target licensed pharma professionals’
IMRAN MUZAFFAR PARRAY
Srinagar, Nov 19: Authorities on Saturday sealed seven medical shops outside SMHS hospital here on the charges of violating the provisions of license under the Drug & Cosmetic Act. Officials More
- Srinagar City
Drainage work keeps Azad away from his home
TWO MONTHS ON, UNION MINISTER COULDN’T VISIT HIS PRIVATE RESIDENCE
M HYDERI
Srinagar, Nov 19: How inconvenient it must have been for thousands of south City residents to bear with the situation arising out of slow work on the mega drainage project, which has missed deadlines by More
- Jammu
17 hurt in Doda accident
FAIZ ALI TRAMBOO
Doda, Nov 19: In yet another mishap within two days, atleast 17 persons were wounded in a head on collision between a bus and a tanker near Kanderi Nallah at Assar area of Doda district. Eyewitnesses More
- News
Cancer drug Avastin loses US approval
Washington, Nov 19: US drug regulators have rescinded approval of a breast cancer drug, saying it is not effective enough to justify the risks of taking it. The drug, Avastin, was approved for US More


