Some more good news for those of us who are battling advanced prostate cancer, In a major breakthrough another new drug has been shown to prolong survival in patients with advanced prostate cancer.
Bayer, a German pharmaceutical company, and Algeta, a Norwegian oncology company, worked together to develop the drug, which is called Alpharadin. Alpharadin treats cancers that have spread to bone by sending tiny doses of radiation just to those parts of the bone where the cancer has metastasized. Pretty amazing sounding, isn’t it?
Alpharadin was recently in Stage III clinical testing when researchers found that it extended survival in patients with advanced prostate cancer from about 11 months to 14 months, a three month increased survival. The trial was stopped early as a result, because “it would have been unethical not to offer the active treatment to those taking placebo,” Chris Parker, a clinical oncologist at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London and one of the Alpharadin researchers, told the European Multidisciplinary Cancer Congress in Stockholm.
Researchers have said that the trials involved prostate cancer patients, but the treatment would probably also work in patients with other types of cancer that have spread to bone.
Radiation has long been used as a treatment for cancer,including as a primary prostate cancer treatment. Alpharadin is novel because it can kill cancer cells without affecting normal cells, which is the main problem with many other cancer treatments, including chemotherapy — and as such, it has significantly fewer side effects.
“It only takes a single alpha particle to kill a cell,” Parker said in a press release. “Collateral damage is minimized because the particles have such a tiny range — a few millionths of a meter — so we can be sure that the damage is being done where it should be, to the metastasis.”
Chemotherapy attacks cells that divide quickly: cancer cells, but also cells in the gastrointestinal tract, bone marrow and hair follicles. This causes the common side effects of nausea, vomiting, hair loss, anemia (low red blood cell count) and weakened immune system (low white blood cell count).
Alpharadin is designed to attack only cancer cells. It does have some side effects, including nausea, but they are much milder than the effects of chemotherapy.
“Compared to chemotherapy, which affects all the tissues of the body, radium-223 is highly targeted to the bone metastases, and it has a completely different safety profile,” Parker said in the press release, adding that the treatment was “extremely well tolerated” in trials.
Another drug for our fight against this dreaded advanced prostate cancer.
Joel T. Nowak, M.A., M.S.W.
Joel-
When will Alpharadin be available in the US? Also, while I have you, whatever happened to the new T-cell-based immunotherapy that was so effectine for chronic CLL?
Thanks,
George
It still needs to be approved by the FDA which could easily be another year. Look at the web page http://www.clinicaltrials.gov to see if they might have another trial going on that you enroll into.
Joel
If having to choose between Mdv 3100 or alphradin for metastatic bone prostate cancer which one would you choose? For overall effectiveness?
Rod sewell
I do not believe that they are exclusive of each other, so my choice would be both. I probably would first go with MDV-3100 then move to Alphradin since the MDV-3100 could also improve any soft tissue issues. Joel