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    FDA revokes approval of Avastin for breast cancer

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The government delivered a blow to some desperate patients Friday as it ruled the blockbuster drug Avastin should no longer be used to treat advanced breast cancer.

    Avastin is hailed for treating colon cancer and certain other malignancies. But the Food and Drug Administration said it appeared to be a false hope for breast cancer: Studies haven't found that it helps those patients live longer or brings enough other benefit to outweigh its dangerous side effects.

    "I did not come to this decision lightly," said the FDA's commissioner, Dr. Margaret Hamburg. But she said, "Sometimes despite the hopes of investigators, patients, industry and even the FDA itself, the results of rigorous testing can be disappointing."

    Avastin remains on the market to treat certain colon, lung, kidney and brain cancers. Doctors are free to prescribe any marketed drug as they see fit. So even though the FDA formally revoked Avastin's approval as a breast cancer treatment, women could still receive it — but their insurers may not pay for it. Some insurers already have quit in anticipation of FDA's long-expected ruling.

    However, "Medicare will continue to cover Avastin," said Brian Cook, spokesman for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. The agency "will monitor the issue and evaluate coverage options as a result of action by the FDA but has no immediate plans to change coverage policies."

    Including infusion fees, a year's treatment with Avastin can reach $100,000.

    The ruling disappointed patients who believe Avastin is helping to curb their incurable cancer.

    "It's saved my life," said a tearful Sue Boyce, 54, of Chicago. She's taken Avastin in addition to chemotherapy since joining a research study in 2003. Her breast cancer eventually spread to her lungs, liver and brain, but Boyce says she is stable and faring well.

    "So I'm hoping the insurance company will grandfather me in to continue taking it," she said.

    The Avastin saga began in 2008, when an initial study suggested the drug could delay tumor growth for a few months in women whose breast cancer had spread to other parts of the body. Over the objection of its own advisers and to the surprise of cancer groups, FDA gave Avastin conditional approval — it could be sold for such women while manufacturer Genentech tried to prove it really worked.

    The problem: Ultimately, the tumor effect was even smaller than first thought. Across repeated studies, Avastin patients didn't live longer or have a higher quality of life. Yet the drug causes some life-threatening risks, including severe high blood pressure, massive bleeding, heart attack or heart failure and tears in the stomach and intestines, the FDA concluded. In two public hearings — one last year and one this summer — FDA advisers urged the agency to revoke that approval.

    "The science is clear: Breast cancer patients are more likely to be harmed than helped by Avastin," said Diana Zuckerman of the National Research Center for Women and Families in Washington.

    Genentech had argued the drug should remain available while it conducted more research to see if certain subsets of breast cancer patients might benefit, and some patients and their doctors had argued passionately for the drug.

    "There certainly are patients who benefit tremendously," said Boyce's oncologist, Dr. Melody Cobleigh of Rush University Medical Center. "We'll just be battling with the insurance companies."

    "For those not fortunate enough to be on Medicare or an insurance plan that covers it, it's a death sentence," Christi Turnage of Madison, Miss., said of the FDA's decision. Her breast cancer had moved into her lungs before she began Avastin three years ago and the spreading stopped, but Turnage said her insurer is ending coverage and she will seek financial help from Genentech's access program.

    Hamburg said that she considered those arguments but that scientifically there are no clues yet to identify who those rare Avastin responders would be — putting a lot of people at risk in order for a few to get some as-yet-unknowable benefit. She urged Genentech to do that research, saying the FDA "absolutely" would reconsider if the company could find the right evidence.

    Genentech, part of Swiss drugmaker Roche Group, pledged to begin that research.

    "We are disappointed with the outcome," said company chief medical officer Dr. Hal Barron. "We remain committed to the many women with this incurable disease and will continue to provide help through our patient support programs to those who may be facing obstacles to receiving their treatment in the United States."

    The breast cancer organization Susan G. Komen for the Cure said that it respected the FDA's decision and that it was time for researchers to concentrate on finding so-called biomarkers that would tell which drug is right for which patient.

    "Each type of cancer is very different from another in important ways, and in the end it's no surprise that Avastin's effectiveness may not be equivalent against all types of cancer," said Dr. Neal Meropol of University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland, who has long used Avastin for colon cancer.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Marley Seaman in New York contributed to this report.

     
    • Jj  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Guess the makers of this drug are not up to date on their lobbyist payments.
      • cricet35 6 mths ago
        Well if you ask me its another drug the fda dont want cancer patients useing becaus it works
      • Kiesha 6 mths ago
        thats wat it sounds like
      • Karen 6 mths ago
        You may be right. I think Avastin and other anti-angiogenesis drugs are already underutilized in cancer patients. This is shameful.
    • Gerald  •  Shelbyville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      search for the Discover Magazine 1999 June issue Cancer Killers
      The government doesn't want a cure .. 2 much $ made without one.
      Alpha-Lactalbumin ... google that FDA .....
      • laynecobain 6 mths ago
        A researcher in Belgium, I believe, found a promising cure for cancer and was systematically discredited and slandered by the "powers that be". We are just cash machines to them.
      • truth teller 6 mths ago
        It's always going to remain so as well. That is the drawback to having a government. Those that get in power, and especially those allowed to remain for too long, no longer care for anything but their own power and wealth. And when the only people that run, are rich, well, you kind of see the ending that will come. Yeah, establish a government for the benefit of everyone, and yet it benefits only itself, while using cosmetics to keep the population quiet, and submissive. And we have a government based on religion, just like the Muslims do. And you all really expect it to end any differently than they have over there.
      • blaine15 6 mths ago
        Sure.. because the advantage to the government is obvious if it's citizens die of cancer.
    • fiasco  •  6 mths ago
      Our health care system is totally bass-ackwards. This one rare instance where the FDA does act is big news - but the fact that there are hundred of prescription drugs that list side effects much worst than the condition being treated and includes side effect of disability and death is never talked about. This is what you get when health professionals get paid when people are sick. In ancient China, your doctor was paid only while you were healthy. And we think we're so smart - nation of sick talking monkeys.
      • TheWiz 6 mths ago
        POSSIBLE side effects, ANY 'adverse' condition that occured in clinical trials. ANY... Meaning some that are not necessarily associated with the drug..

        There sure a LOT of people that have no idea what they are talking about on these boards.
    • BigChad  •  6 mths ago
      No money in a cure.
      • cricet35 6 mths ago
        as i always said it
      • Max Reiner 6 mths ago
        000h! That was an AWESOME comment. I'll put that in a script!
      • Max Reiner 6 mths ago
        The analogy of holding back cures for cancer is akin to the classic Brit film,"Man in the White Suit" with Alec Guinness. About a guy who comes up with a fabric that never needs washing and never wears out. So the textile manufacturers try to take it away from him.

        I'm working on a similar themed script now.
    • adam rapach  •  Pensacola, United States  •  6 mths ago
      This is just another example of patent manipulation. This worked for so many people, now the gov. has given insurers an out. This will set treatment back many years.
      • fiasco 6 mths ago
        Treatment was set back over 100 years ago when Rockefeller funded allopathic medicine over naturopathic treatment because of his greed to sell oil.
    • Phnortney  •  6 mths ago
      Again the insurance companies are deciding that it is too expensive and our lemmings in government ban it. My father was on Avastin for brain cancer after all else failed, we got 4 extra years with him until the protein levels were to high and he had to be taken off. He passed 6 months later. It is ashame that these drug companies and insurance companies have to make millions for their CEO's and screw what would help the patients.
    • LESLIE  •  St. Louis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Oh I see, they put it up there as long as I don't mention the fact that he found a cure for cancer in the 1970's and the FDA has been keeping him tied up in court ever since
    • Runs with scissors  •  Bandon, United States  •  6 mths ago
      there will never be a cure for cancer as long as the treatments are a multi-billion dollar industry.
    • J. D  •  Albuquerque, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Tell me, oh great FDA and the AMA, How much money do you make off of healthy people??? Isn't it in YOUR best interests that you TREAT rather than Cure?
    • c  •  Wichita, United States  •  6 mths ago
      other countries use much more effective cancer treatments than America is allowed to use.
      look other places for real doctors who care about more than your finances.
    • Tom  •  6 mths ago
      There is no money in a cure. The money is to be made in treating the cancer not curing it.
      Is this the same FDA that has a Monsanto employee running it?
    • who are you  •  6 mths ago
      Pharmasutical lobby is the biggest in Washington..........Get politics out of medicine
      Pharmasuticals donate campaign money to politicians and politicians run pahrmasutials.
      ..........Get politics out of medicine......
    • Mr Frost  •  Dayton, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Of course it's really about money and what inscurance will pay for.
    • noobama 2012  •  6 mths ago
      but they pass out the drugs that can give you cancer, or just out right kill you.
    • juan chavez  •  Guayaquil, Ecuador  •  6 mths ago
      slip the FDA a few million dollars and they would approve poison for a cold,,,it may kill you but the FDA got it`s money......
    • Mush Limpballs  •  6 mths ago
      Lock up some guy for a half joint, and allow corp drug companies to kill and sicken millions......hmmm.
    • blaine15  •  Hackensack, United States  •  6 mths ago
      What a bunch of tin-foil hat wearing, conspiacry theory believing, paranoid fools commenting here. Wow. I feel so bad for this country. Science, facts and data mean nothing anymore.

      Remember, don't vaccinate your children!!! Much better to be part of a misguided movement that will bring preventable epidemics back to America.
    • barondriver  •  Southfield, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Avastin won FDA approval originally because it was demonstrated to work against breast and brain cancer. It was not the "silver bullit" but trials showed that Avastin had promise. I believe that my late wife's life was prolonged by Avastin. Sure she passed away, but how will a cure ever be found without trials and errors??? My wish is that you people who post negative comments do not have to learn from real world experience. Think about it!!!
    • Barnabas Collins  •  6 mths ago
      There goes $16billion profit for the drug maker. Cancer is really big business!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Atlanta, United States  •  6 mths ago
      My sister and a very good friend were both on this drug for treatment of breast cancer that had spread thru out their bodies. I have sadly lost them both. I don't know that this drug helped or hurt them. We need to put more money into research.
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