Avastin, More Harm Than Good?
The cancer drug Avastin appears to reduce a
person's chance of surviving when administered with certain chemotherapies.
There's more bad news about the cancer drug
Avastin. A review of
previous studies suggests that treatment with Avastin causes more deaths than
treatment with chemotherapy or biologic agents alone. The review found that
patients taking Avastin in combination with a chemotherapy or biologic agent
were nearly 50% more likely to die from the treatment than patients taking the
chemotherapy or biologic agent alone.
The review did not look at overall
death or survival rates. It only looked at deaths that were most likely caused
by the cancer treatment itself. These are known as fatal adverse events or
FAEs.
Avastin (bevacizumab) is an antibody
against a factor that causes growth of new blood vessels. It can kill cancer
cells by interfering with their blood supply. It can also cause problems with
the blood metabolism of normal tissues, leading to increased risk of
hemorrhaging or drastic lowering of white blood cell count (neutropenia), the
two most frequent causes of death found in the review.
Controversy has
surrounded Avastin since its initial approval. In February 2008, the drug was
approved by the FDA for treatment of metastatic breast cancer despite an
advisory panel voting 5-4 against approval the previous December. A single
clinical trial had showed Avastin to slow tumor growth but showed no
improvement in overall patient survival. The FDA approval was contingent on
further studies showing benefits of Avastin treatment.
Since its approval, Avastin has been used to treat
many different types of cancers.
Three subsequent studies of Avastin failed to find a
survival benefit from its use. In December 2010, the FDA recommended removing
the breast cancer indication from Avastin's label, essentially overturning its
initial approval, though the drug was not removed from the market. This
recommendation did not apply to Avastin use for colon, brain, lung and kidney
cancer.
The recent review looked at 16 trials of Avastin
involving over 10,000 patients with various types of advanced cancer. The
trials all compared patients taking Avastin plus a chemotherapy or biologic agent
to patients taking the chemotherapy or biologic agent alone. It found that 2.5%
of patients taking Avastin had died from a treatment-related cause, compared
with 1.7% of the patients who did not take Avastin. This is a 46% increased
risk of death.
The treatment-related death rate did not vary with
cancer type but did vary with the type of chemotherapy agent patients were
receiving. In patients receiving taxanes or platinum agents, the risk was 3.5
times as high when they also took Avastin. In patients receiving other
chemotherapy agents, Avastin did not increase the rate of treatment-related
death.
Because
this review only looks at deaths stemming from cancer treatment, it does not
add any information to the ongoing debate over whether treatment with Avastin
lowers the death rate from cancer or increases the overall survival rate of
cancer patients.
An editorial accompanying the review
suggests that Avastin works well in some patients but that it is currently not
possible to tell which patients will benefit from Avastin and which will not.
Avastin treatment costs $50,000 per
year for the drug alone and is difficult to administer, requiring frequent
injections. Add in the uncertainty about its effectiveness and doctors and
patients alike may have a difficult time deciding who might be a good candidate
for Avastin treatment.
Both the review and the editorial
appear in the Feb 2, 2011 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA).
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