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FDA approves breakthrough cancer therapy Provenge

Thu Apr 29, 2010 1:38 PM EDT
business, health, us, cancer, drug, fda, drug-administration
Matthew Perrone, AP Health Writer
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WASHINGTON — A first-of-a-kind prostate cancer treatment that uses the body's immune system to fight the disease received federal approval Thursday, offering an important alternative to more taxing treatments like chemotherapy.

Dendreon Corp.'s Provenge vaccine trains the immune system to fight tumors. It's called a "vaccine" even though it treats disease rather than prevents it.

Doctors have been trying to develop such a therapy for decades, and Provenge is the first to win approval from the Food and Drug Administration.

"The big news here is that this is the first immunotherapy to win approval, and I suspect within five to ten years immunotherapies will be a big part of cancer therapy in general," said Dr. Phil Kantoff, an oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute who helped run the studies of Provenge.

Experimental vaccines to treat other cancers — including the deadly skin disease melanoma and an often fatal childhood tumor called neuroblastoma — are already in late-stage development.

Currently doctors treat cancer by surgically removing tumors, attacking them with chemotherapy drugs or blasting them with radiation. Provenge offers an important fourth approach by directing the body's natural defense mechanisms against the disease.

The treatment is intended for prostate cancer that has spread elsewhere in the body and is not responding to hormone therapy.

Medical specialists hailed the approval as an important milestone, but stressed it will serve as an addition to current medical practice, not a replacement.

"This is just one step in a new pathway for treating patients," said Dr. Simon Hall, chairman of urology at Mt. Sinai Hospital. "We have to make them realize this isn't a cure, it's very variable."

Company studies showed that taking Provenge added four months to the lives of men with advanced prostate cancer.

That may not sound like a lot, but it is longer than the three months afforded by Taxotere, the only chemotherapy approved for men in this situation. Doctors hope for even greater benefit if they give the drug earlier in the course of the disease.

Dendreon said Thursday the drug will cost $93,000 per patient.

The approval marks a remarkable turnaround for Seattle-based Dendreon, whose shares plummeted three years ago when the FDA delayed a decision on the therapy, asking for more proof of safety and effectiveness. That delay came despite an expert panel's recommendation for approval.

Dendreon shares jumped 19 percent to new highs ahead of the news, rising to an all-time high of $47.32. The company spent more than 15 years developing and testing Provenge.

Analysts expect the product to reach blockbuster sales status — over $1 billion — by 2016, as the company expands production capacity.

Each regimen of Provenge must to tailored to the immune system of the patient using a time-consuming formulation process.

Doctors collect special blood cells from each patient that help the immune system recognize cancer as a threat. The cells are mixed with a protein found on most prostate cancer cells and another substance to rev up the immune system. The resulting "vaccine" is given back to the patient as three infusions two weeks apart.

Initially, Dendreon will identify Provenge patients through the 50 medical centers that helped test the drug. But researchers have been told the company will only be able to provide vaccines for a few patients at each site per month.

"There are going to be a lot of patients that want it and there will be limited resources as they are getting this up and running," said Dr. Deborah Bradley of Duke University School of Medicine

About 192,000 new cases of prostate cancer were diagnosed in 2009, and 27,000 men died of the disease, according to the FDA. Prostate cancer most often affects older men.

Side effects of Provenge are relatively mild, such as chills, fatigue, fever, and headache. By comparison, side effects of chemotherapy typically include hair loss, nausea, anemia and diarrhea.

___

AP Business Writer Marley Seaman contributed to this story from New York

Eds: CORRECTS pricing. minor edits throughout.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (6)
Doctor Leon

This is remarkable news. Heartfelt congratulations and thanks to Dendreon Corp. No, I don't suffer from prostate cancer, but now perhaps I won't have to worry about the prospect either. What I'd like to know is whether this research and trial project was fully funded by Dendreon Corp and its investors or were funds from the American Cancer Society also applied towards this discovery? It would be nice to know that the millions upon millions of dollars sucked up by the American Cancer Society actually contributed towards a credible cure instead of being squadered away in endless research that never amounted to anything.

    Reply#1 - Fri Apr 30, 2010 9:48 AM EDT
    AdipicAcid

    Two months too late for my Dad, regrettably.

    And Leon, you must be real unfamiliar with how research works.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#2 - Fri Apr 30, 2010 10:02 AM EDT
    Doctor Leon

    Would you like to show me a legitimate return on the millions of dollars people donated to Jerry Lewis telethons for muscular dystrophy research? The sad truth is that scientists are cutting their own throats if they actually develop a cure because then they're out of a job unless they can obtain donations or grants to start research on another problem, condition or disease. I am intimately familiar with the ins and outs of research. A cure is only beneficial if a commercial organization can make a profit from the manufacture and sale of the cure. At that point, the research personnel who discovered or developed the cure are no longer required by the company.

    Truly sorry about your dad.

      Reply#3 - Fri Apr 30, 2010 12:05 PM EDT
      AdipicAcid

      Research, by its very nature, is unpredictable. You can spend billions for years and find nothing, and then all of the sudden something is found. Companies who invest in R&D (at least the successful ones) understand this. You never know when (or if) the breakthrough is going to come. That's science in action.

      • 1 vote
      #3.1 - Fri Apr 30, 2010 12:11 PM EDT
      Reply
      ledgeroo

      It seems to me, they should have been working on this 50 yrs ago. If cancer is an opportunistic disease that takes root where there's a chink in the immune system, wouldn't it make sense to try to reboot the immune system, turbo charge it? Instead of dev. all these toxic chemotherapy drugs that poison the system and kill any rapidly reproducing cells (healthy and malignant) and damaging DNA in the process. It's never been proven that all cancer cells reproduce rapidly. If this vaccine really does work it's great but it is as yet unproven.

        Reply#4 - Sat May 1, 2010 9:09 AM EDT
        AdipicAcid

        It seems to me, they should have been working on this 50 yrs ago.

        50 years ago the immune system was essentially a black box. In the intervening decades some of that "useless" research money has gone to increasing our basic understanding of it, which allows therapies like this to be conceived of. That's the way research works, I'm afraid: often times you set off at a beginning and have no idea where you will end up. It could be a dead end, something really, really banal like Post-It glue, or earth shattering. You don't get to use hindsight until after the research is over.

        • 1 vote
        #4.1 - Sat May 1, 2010 9:26 AM EDT
        Reply
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