Recent Posts
- MicroRNA-Mediated Metastasis Suppression
- A New Explanation Of ‘Asian Paradox’
- Toward Bold New Anti-cancer Medicines
- Celsion And Yakult Honsha Announce Treatment Of First Patient In Japan In Celsion’s Global Phase III ThermoDox(R) Trial For Primary Liver Cancer
- $6.5 Million Gift To UCSF From Irwin And Joan Jacobs For Head And Neck Cancer Research
Random Posts
- Hybrid Linac-MRI System Described At Medical Physics Meeting In Anaheim
- A Surprise 'Spark' For Pre-Cancerous Colon Polyps
- Workshop Targets Control-Theoretic Approaches For Agent-Based Models
- SID: Vitamin D3 May Protect Against Nonmelanoma Skin Cancer (CME/CE)
- Black Women Develop Breast Cancer At Earlier Ages, Have Higher Mortality Rates Than Other Women, Study Finds
- Toward Bold New Anti-cancer Medicines
- American Cancer Society, The Culinary Institute Of America And Ace Of Cakes Chef Duff Join Forces To Reinvent The Birthday Cake
- Celleron Therapeutics And Astrazeneca Announce Personalised Medicine Collaboration In Cancer For The Development Of AZ's Leading HDAC Inhibitor
- Metformin Boosts Immune System in Mice (CME/CE)
- Limb-Sparing Surgery May Not Provide Better Quality Of Life Than Amputation For Bone Cancer Patients
Prescription Cancer Drugs
Mortality Of Cancer Patients Increased By Anaemia Treatment That Stimulates Red Blood Cell Production
Posted by: admin in Prescription Cancer Drugs on October 10th, 2009
Agents used to treat anaemia in cancer patients, that work by stimulating red blood cell production, also increase mortality. The increased risk of death associated with these drugs should be balanced against their benefits in cancer patients. These are the conclusions of an Article in this week’s edition of The Lancet, written by Dr Julia Bohlius, University of Bern, Switzerland, and Professor Andreas Engert, University of Cologne, Germany, and colleagues.
These drugs, called erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (or ESAs), reduce the need for red blood cell transfusions and could improve quality of life for patients with cancer. However, they have been reported to increase the risk of heart attack and stroke, and might also stimulate tumour growth. Uncertainty remains about whether and how these drugs affect survival; their safety has been discussed repeatedly at hearings of the US Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency. The authors did a meta-analysis of 53 cancer trials featuring almost 14,000 patients to establish the effect of ESAs on mortality. They assessed mortality during the active study period* and during the longest available follow-up.
The researchers found that 1530 patients died during the active study period and 4933 died overall. ESAs were associated with a relative increase in mortality during the active study period of 17%. When an analysis was done of only cancer patients receiving chemotherapy (38 trials, 10,441 patients), the relative increase in mortality attributable to ESAs was 10%. The type of anticancer treatment given did not make a difference to outcomes.
The authors say: “The findings of this individual patient data meta-analysis show that erythropoiesis-stimulating agents increase mortality in all patients with cancer, and a similar increase might exist in patients on chemotherapy… In clinical practice, the increased risks of death and thromboembolic events should be balanced against the benefits of treatment with erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, taking into account each patient’s clinical circumstances and preferences. More data are needed for the effect of these drugs on quality of life and tumour progression, and meta-analyses similar to this one will address these questions.”
Source
The Lancet
No Comments »
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.





