http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/325/7358/269
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Silvio Garattini
Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research, 20157 Milan, Italy
Correspondence to: S Garattini sgarattini@marionegri.it
Italian pharmacologists Silvio Garattini and Vittorio Bertele' note that new
anticancer drugs reaching the European market in 1995-2000 offered
few or no substantial advantages over existing preparations, yet cost
several times
in one
case 350 times
as
much
Though only an imperfect indicator of progress in cancer control,1 age standardised mortality in the European Union, for both sexes combined, had been increasing up to 1988; since then it has decreased from 147 to 136 per 100 000 inhabitants.2 Prevention is probably one of the main reasons for this drop, particularly the decrease in tobacco smoking; another reason is the use of screening for early diagnosis of cancers of the cervix and breast and possibly also of the colon and rectum..
The greatest changes have been 4500 fewer deaths from childhood tumours and 4000 fewer from lymphomas (Hodgkin's disease) each year over the past four decades. Among solid tumours, advances have been made in treating breast cancer, in which tamoxifen increases 10 year survival by 6% for node negative and 11% for node positive tumours,3 and chemotherapy increases survival by 7% and 11%, respectively.4 For most other common solid tumours such as those of lung, oesophagus, stomach, or pancreas, only limited survival gains have been achieved. 2 5 6
On the whole, pharmacological treatments are credited with only a very small
proportion of cures.7 However, some kind of
pharmacological intervention is often considered as a last resort,
particularly when cancer has already disseminated. We evaluated
the progress made over the past few years in terms of new drugs
approved for prescription in order to judge their likely impact on
cancer mortality in the near future.
| Summary points
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Methods |
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The European Medicines Evaluation Agency, set up in January 1995, has led to Europe-wide approval of the most important drugs, including anticancer medicines. Drugs approved by the agency are automatically marketable in 15 European countries. Despite their cost, new anticancer drugs will probably be used in a large proportion of patients.
We identified 12 anticancer drugs approved in the six years from 1995-2000 which contain new chemical entities or known active principles with new indications (table). The information on the new drugs was collected from several documents (available on www.emea.eu.int/index/indexh1.htm), including the European public assessment report, which describe the steps, reasons, and commitments for the approval of a given drug, and the summaries of product characteristics, the technical documents that report indications and adverse reactions for each drug. We calculated the costs of treatments on the basis of cost per cycle of therapy and compared costs, where possible, with those of reference drugs. Prices of drugs are those pertaining in Italy when available, converting the Italian lira at a rate of 1936.27 to the euro (£1.58, $1).
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| What defines a
response to a drug?
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New approvals
Analysis of the clinical trials reported in the European public
assessment reports or summaries of product characteristics shows that
anticancer agents are often approved on the basis of phase II trials.
Few attempts are made to establish the value of the new drugs in
relation to the reference drugs. The trials often look for
"non-inferiority," which entails recruiting only few patients and
relatively short periods of observation. The end points tend to be
subjective, such as the "time to progression"; seldom is there an
evaluation of survival or quality of life. There is a tendency to
seek the first approval for an indication for second or third line
treatment in a relatively rare cancer in Europe: in three cases the
indication was for Kaposi's sarcoma in patients with AIDS. There seem
to be few innovative treatments for cancers of such sites as the
colon and rectum, prostate, or pancreas.
As for safety, most drugs caused the usual signs of cytotoxicity, including neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, fever, infections, and gastrointestinal toxicity. In no instance did comparisons show a clear cut advantage, in terms of adverse reactions, over the reference drugs or analogous agents.
New approvals lead to expectations, fuelled by the pharmaceutical companies' direct and indirect promotion through the media, on the part of patients, their families, and their doctors, but these expectations may not be justified by the results of trials.7 At the time of approval the medicines agency may ask a company to carry out additional studies. The company may plead that off label use makes these difficult "for ethical reasons." But it is for these ethical reasons that new drugs should be compared with existing drugs.
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Costs
The approval of new drugs that offer no substantial advantages puts
further burdens on national health services, insurers, and patients.
The costs of the new preparations are several times
sometimes
an order of magnitude
higher
than those of existing drugs. This increase is difficult to justify,
considering that the newer drugs are usually largely equivalent to
the standard treatments in efficacy and safety. The lack of
differences in activity makes any pharmacoeconomic evaluation
virtually useless: it is difficult to explain why toremifene should
cost more than twice as much as tamoxifen. Similarly, one
temozolomide cycle costs about 350 times as much as a cycle of
procarbazine, although there are serious doubts about the real
efficacy of either treatment.9 In ovarian cancer,
one cycle of topotecan costs over 10 times more than a cycle of
cisplatin. The new drugs for advanced breast cancer cost 3-13 times
as much as doxorubicin. Just to complicate matters further,
pharmacoeconomic assessments of new anticancer drugs tend to be
biased in their favour.10
None of the 12 drugs included in this list offers any significant improvement in activity. The liposomal preparation of doxorubicin may be less cardiotoxic, although cardiotoxicity does not seem to be an important limiting factor in the efficacy of doxorubicin.11 It has also been claimed that epirubicin is less cardiotoxic than doxorubicin.12
The monoclonal antibodies are completely new anticancer agents but their efficacy has yet to be confirmed by appropriate studies, while their safety seems unfavourable, contrary to all expectations.13 Perhaps the results will be better when some of these drugs are combined in new therapeutic schemes.
From these results over the past six years there is little to justify some of the promises made to the public. 7 It is widely expected that the general population of cancer patients not involved in clinical trials will gain no benefit from new anticancer drugs. It is to be hoped, however, that some new anticancer drugs, including resistant revertants, anti-angiogenic agents, pro-apoptotic drugs, and chemopreventive products, will soon undergo adequate clinical testing and show substantial benefits over current therapies.
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Acknowledgments |
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SG and VB act as member and expert of the Committee for Proprietary Medical Products. The views presented here are those of the authors and should not be understood or quoted as being made on behalf of the European Medicines Evaluation Agency or its scientific committees.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: None.
Competing interests: In the last five years VB has received fees for speaking from Schwarz Italia SpA and Instrumentation Laboratory, and for scientific advice from SmithKline Beecham and Aventis Pharma.
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References |
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| 1. | Quinn MJ, Babb PJ, Brock A, Kirby EA, Jones J. Cancer trends in England and Wales, 1950-1999. London: Stationery Office, 2001:206-207. (Studies on medical and population subjects No 66.) |
| 2. | Levi F, Lucchini F, Negri E, La Vecchia C. The decline in cancer mortality in the European Union, 1988-1996. Eur J Cancer 2000; 36: 1965-1968[Medline]. |
| 3. | Early breast cancer trialists' collaborative group. Tamoxifen for early breast cancer: an overview of the randomised trials. Lancet 1998; 351: 1451-1467[Medline]. |
| 4. | Early breast cancer trialists' collaborative group. Polychemotherapy for early breast cancer: an overview of the randomised trials. Lancet 1998; 352: 930-942[Medline]. |
| 5. | Berrino F, Gatta G, Chessa E, Valente F, Capocaccia R, the Eurocare Working Group. Introduction: the Eurocare II study. Eur J Cancer 1998; 34: 2139-2153. |
| 6. | Coleman MP. Opinion: why the variation in breast cancer survival in Europe? Breast Cancer Res 1999; 1: 22-26[Medline]. |
| 7. | Bailar JC, Gornik HL. Cancer undefeated. N Engl J Med 1997; 336: 1569-1574[Abstract/Full Text]. |
| 8. | Garattini S, Bertele' V. Adjusting Europe's drug regulation to public health needs. Lancet 2001; 358: 64-67[Medline]. |
| 9. | Batchelor T. Temozolomide for malignant brain tumours. Lancet 2000; 355: 1115-1116[Medline]. |
| 10. | Friedberg M, Saffran B, Stinson TJ, Nelson W, Bennett CL. Evaluation of conflict of interest in economic analyses of new drugs used in oncology. JAMA 1999; 282: 1453-1457[Medline]. |
| 11. | Hortobagyi GN. Anthracyclines in the treatment of cancer. An overview. Drugs 1997; 54(suppl 4): S1-S7. |
| 12. | Findlay BP, Walker-Dilks C. Epirubicin, alone or in combination chemotherapy, for metastatic breast cancer. Provincial breast cancer disease site group and the Provincial systemic treatment disease site group. Cancer Prev Control 1998; 2: 140-146[Medline]. |
| 13. | White CA, Weaver RL, Grillo-Lopez AJ. Antibody-targeted immunotherapy for treatment of malignancy. Annu Rev Med 2001; 52: 25-45. |
(Accepted 31 January 2002)
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