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News Release
| For immediate use |
June 4, 2006 -- No. 290 |
Drug shows promise against
advanced form of lung cancer
CHAPEL HILL – Results of a multi-center clinical study of a drug currently
approved for treatment of kidney cancer indicate that it may also be effective
for people with recurrent and advanced lung cancer.
The findings of this phase-2 clinical trial will be presented at the American
Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meetings in Atlanta on Sunday (June 4).
Dr. Mark A. Socinski, associate professor of medicine at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill and a clinical faculty member of the UNC Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center, is the study’s principal investigator. Socinski
said the activity data on Pfizer’s oral drug, sunitinib malate, appears “very
similar” to that of other currently approved agents for non-small cell lung
cancer.
Another drug, Avastin, keeps new blood vessels from forming and has been shown
to help people with advanced lung cancer live longer when it was given along
with chemotherapy.
Sunitinib, which is also an anti-angiogenic agent, interferes with a tumor cell’s
ability to develop new blood vessels. It acts on a molecular level by inhibiting
an enzyme – tyrosine kinase – that activates cellular growth factor receptors,
thus preventing further blood vessel growth.
“As a single agent, this drug worked in a difficult group of patients whose
advanced disease had been previously treated with other chemotherapies and whose
options were limited,” Socinski said.
According to the UNC thoracic oncologist, among 63 patients treated, there were
six confirmed partial responses, with disease stabilized in an additional 27.
He said data as to length of survival “are still pending.”
The patients were enrolled in the trial from January to October 2005. Treatment
involved one 50-milligram oral dose (pill) per day for four weeks followed by
two weeks off treatment, thus a six-week treatment cycle.
Adverse affects (toxicities) of the drug include fatigue, nausea, vomiting,
abdominal pain and high blood pressure. Two patients developed a pulmonary hemorrhage
and one a cerebral hemorrhage.
After the initial 63 patients, 47 more have been treated on a continuous dose
of the drug, at 37.5 milligrams per day. This extension of the clinical trial
will explore the effectiveness and safety of a continuous dosing strategy, Socinski
said.
Along with UNC, other centers involved in the trial were the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine in Baltimore; Washington University School of Medicine in
St. Louis; University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; Southeastern Medical
Oncology in Glassboro, N.C.; University of Virginia in Charlottesville; the
University of Turin in Italy; and San Pablo Hospital and Germans Trias and Pujol
Hospital in Barcelona, Spain.
According to the American Cancer Society, about 85 percent of all lung cancers
are of the non-small cell type.
Pfizer Inc., La Jolla, California, funded this clinical trial.
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Note: From Saturday (June 3) through Monday (June 5), during the ASCO
meetings, journalists seeking an interview with Socinski should contact Tom
Hughes at (919) 741-8840 (cell) or (919) 216-3196 (pager).
UNC Medicine contacts after June 5: Les Lang at (919) 843-9687 or llang@med.unc.edu;
Dianne Shaw, (919) 966-7834 or dgs@med.unc.edu.