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Harry in Fair Oaks.
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- May 17, 2012 at 12:33 am
Glaxo’s Melanoma Cocktail Slows Cancer in Study
Glaxo’s Melanoma Cocktail Slows Cancer in Study
By Makiko Kitamura and Robert Langreth – May 16, 2012 6:00 PM ET
GlaxoSmithKline Plc (GSK)’s combination of two experimental melanoma medicines slowed cancer progression with few skin complications in an early clinical trial, a result that suggests the combo may have fewer side effects than existing single-drug treatments.
Patients taking Glaxo’s dabrafenib and trametinib together had a lower incidence of rash and skin lesions than previously reported with Roche’s Zelboraf, according to a study of 77 patients with advanced melanoma, the most-severe form of skin cancer. The study, funded by London-based Glaxo, was released today ahead of the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting that starts June 1 in Chicago.
“Not only are the two drugs causing shrinkage of the cancer, but we’re seeing that a second anti-cancer therapy may actually suppress the side effects of the first,” said Jeffrey Weber, an oncologist at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida, in a statement. “So far it is looking good.”
If the Glaxo combination succeeds in final-stage trials, it would compete with Zelboraf, a targeted therapy cleared for sale in the U.S. in August. Both Zelboraf and Glaxo’s dabrafenib work by blocking BRAF, a mutant gene that spurs cancer cell growth in about half of melanoma patients. Glaxo’s trametinib is designed to thwart a related protein called MEK, which helps tumors resist an assault on BRAF.
Adding the MEK drug may reduce a signature side effect of BRAF drugs like Zelboraf, the development of non-melanoma skin cancer, while possibly boosting efficacy, said Weber, a study leader, in a telephone interview. Weber has consulted for Glaxo and Roche. (ROG)
Non-Melanoma Cancers
About 15 to 30 percent of melanoma patients treated with Zelboraf and other BRAF inhibitors develop non-melanoma skin cancers, scientists at the Institute of Cancer Research said in an article published in the New England Journal of Medicine in January. The drugs speed a type of skin malignancy known as squamous-cell carcinoma in patients who may have gotten the cancer anyway, they said.
Only 3 percent of a larger group of patients in the Glaxo combo study, which also included other solid tumors, developed squamous cell carcinoma, and 5 percent developed premalignant lesions called actinic keratoses, Weber said.
Across various doses, the combination delayed progression of the disease by 7.4 months. In the high-dose level, which will be studied in further trials, the two-drug therapy delayed the progression of the disease by 10.8 months, Weber said.
Roche Comparison
Roche’s Zelboraf delayed melanoma tumors from progressing for 6.8 months in one early trial and 5.3 months in a final-stage trial.
“It would look clearly superior to the figure we have seen” with the Roche drug, Weber said on a conference call with reporters. “It is a very impressive record by any criteria.”
Charlotte Arnold, a spokeswoman for Basel, Switzerland-based Roche, said in an e-mail that “it is not appropriate” to compare data from Zelboraf’s approval trials to results from the early study of Glaxo’s combination, as it did not directly compare the agents. Zelboraf has been proven to extend survival of melanoma patients.
Glaxo plans to start a final-stage trial “as early as this month” said Melinda Stubbee, a spokeswoman for the British drugmaker, in a phone interview. The trial would compare the combination to Glaxo’s dabrafenib alone in melanoma patients.
Glaxo also has also been studying each drug separately for melanoma and will seek regulatory approval of both compounds individually later this year.
Melanoma strikes 68,000 Americans each year, according to the American Cancer Society. While patients with early stage disease respond well to treatment, the five-year survival rate for those with cancer that has spread is 15 percent.
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- May 17, 2012 at 2:49 am
I have been on this trial for over a year now. Looks like I'm one of the 24 patients who got randomized to the max dosage. How "smart" of me! So far so good – latest scans continue to show no progression, with sub-qs gone and all bone mets stable, shrinking, or undetectable.
Best wishes to everyone,
Harry
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- May 17, 2012 at 2:49 am
I have been on this trial for over a year now. Looks like I'm one of the 24 patients who got randomized to the max dosage. How "smart" of me! So far so good – latest scans continue to show no progression, with sub-qs gone and all bone mets stable, shrinking, or undetectable.
Best wishes to everyone,
Harry
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- May 17, 2012 at 2:49 am
I have been on this trial for over a year now. Looks like I'm one of the 24 patients who got randomized to the max dosage. How "smart" of me! So far so good – latest scans continue to show no progression, with sub-qs gone and all bone mets stable, shrinking, or undetectable.
Best wishes to everyone,
Harry
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- May 17, 2012 at 10:51 pm
I believe so. I know that I tested positive for the BRAF mutation before I started the trial.
Best wishes,
Harry
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- May 17, 2012 at 10:51 pm
I believe so. I know that I tested positive for the BRAF mutation before I started the trial.
Best wishes,
Harry
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- May 17, 2012 at 10:51 pm
I believe so. I know that I tested positive for the BRAF mutation before I started the trial.
Best wishes,
Harry
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