Archive > May 2006

Comprehensive Cancer Care Improvement Act of 2006

» 26 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » Comments Off

From ASCO, May 26 2006.

On Wednesday, Reps. Lois Capps (D-CA) and Tom Davis (R-VA) introduced HR 5465, the “Comprehensive Cancer Care Improvement Act of 2006,” to reform the Medicare system so it more appropriately pays for all of the services needed to provide patients with comprehensive cancer care.

HR 5465 would establish a new Medicare service for the development of:

1)a treatment plan at the beginning of primary therapy and communication of the plan to the patient, and

2)a cancer care summary and follow-up care plan at the end of primary therapy and communication of the plan to the patient.

These services are essential to providing the resources needed to assure quality care for patients, both during and after their term of active treatment for cancer.

The legislation, supported by the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship (NCCS), patient advocacy groups and many cancer centers also includes provisions to improve symptom management and palliative care for patients.

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SSRIs could reduce risk of colorectal cancer

» 18 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » Comments Off

May 2006

The use of some antidepressants may reduce the risk of developing colorectal cancer, according to researchers reporting in The Lancet Oncology. The antidepressants, known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), may inhibit the growth of colorectal tumors, according to lead researcher Jean-Paul Collet, MD, from the Sir Mortimer B. Davis Jewish General Hospital in Montreal.

“Further investigation is needed, with more complete assessment of confounders, such as lifestyle factors, use of drugs and comorbidity, that might affect the occurrence of colorectal cancer,” Collet added in a press statement.

Full story at Hem/Onc Today
Sources:
* Xu W, Tamim H, Shapiro S, et al. Use of antidepressants and risk of colorectal cancer: a nested case-control study. Lancet Oncol. 2006;7:301-308.
* Sørensen HT. Selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors and chemoprevention of colorectal cancer. Lancet Oncol. 2006;7:277-279.

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Cancer Patients Vow to Continue Hunger Strike

» 15 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » Comments Off

12:35 May 15, ’06 / 17 Iyar 5766

(IsraelNN.com) Colon cancer patients launched a hunger strike “to the death” outside the Knesset on Sunday, announcing that if the national government does not update the healthcare basket to include their drugs, they will continue their strike until their death, explaining they have nothing to lose.

Strikers explain that the healthcare system does not currently subsidize the drugs that can save their lives, and therefore, the pharmaceuticals are too expensive for them. They insist the government cannot turn their backs on so many citizens who can be helped, but lack the funds to purchase the drugs that offer them a cure.
Source:
Arutz Sheva – Israel National News

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Injected Cells Cure Tumors in Mice — Study

» 11 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » 1 Comment

Researchers hope the phenomenon can lead to a new path in treating cancer in humans.
By Thomas H. Maugh II, L. A. Times Staff Writer
May 9, 2006
White blood cells from mice that are naturally immune to cancer cured tumors in other mice and provided them with lifelong immunity to the disease, researchers reported Monday.

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Biotechs to cap prices on cancer therapies

» 10 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » Comments Off

Wary of Backlash, Cancer-Drug Makers Weigh Price Limits
Wall Street Journal
By JOHN CARREYROU and GEETA ANAND
May 10, 2006; Page B1
As high prices of cancer drugs spark the kind of patient outrage that high AIDS-drug prices unleashed more than a decade ago, a few pharmaceutical and biotech companies are weighing caps and other cost-containment measures, before the outcry turns into a public-relations crisis for the industry.

ImClone Systems Inc. and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., co-marketers of Erbitux, one of the most expensive cancer drugs on the market, are “well down the road” toward establishing an annual patient price cap for the drug if its market expands, says Ronald Martell, senior vice president of commercial operations at ImClone. Such a program would set an annual ceiling on individual patients’ drug-treatment costs, beyond which companies would provide the drug free of charge or at a steep discount. Genentech Corp., of South San Francisco, Calif., is considering cost-containing alternatives for Avastin, which is currently approved for treatment of early-stage colorectal cancer.
While the backlash against cancer-drug prices is nowhere near as big as the one against AIDS-drug prices, ImClone’s Mr. Martell says the industry should make changes in its policies now. “Otherwise, at some point there will be a confluence of events — social pressure, volume of dollars — and something will have to give,” he warns.

Erbitux, priced at $10,000 a month, is currently approved only for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer who have failed a certain kind of chemotherapy. Their average total cost of treatment is currently about $40,000: In most of these patients, the illness has advanced to the point where they are only a few months from death.

But later this year, ImClone and Bristol-Myers, both based in New York, hope to win Food and Drug Administration approval to market Erbitux for patients in earlier stages of colorectal cancer, who have longer life expectancies. Approval for these patients would result in a sharp rise in the average cost of treatment with Erbitux — and a sharp rise in profits.

In the case of Genentech’s Avastin, the current cost of treatment — $4,400 a month, or $52,000 a year — could rise sharply if the FDA approves the drug as a treatment — at double the dose — to treat lung cancer and breast cancer. Such approvals, expected over the next year, could result in thousands of new patients paying, at current prices, more than $100,000 a year to take Avastin.

The Medicare Modernization Act of 2003, which extended prescription-drug benefits to the elderly, has put financial pressure on elderly cancer patients, the age group with the highest rates of the disease. Under the old system, cancer patients receiving drugs intravenously at a hospital in practice often weren’t forced to make their 20% co-payment: The hospital would bill Medicare directly, and the Medicare reimbursement price — as much as 25% above the drugs’ market price — provided a sufficient profit cushion so that hospitals often didn’t collect co-payments.

But now, Medicare reimbursements are in line with drugs’ actual selling prices, and physicians and hospitals can no longer afford to forgive co-payments. As a result, many elderly cancer patients without supplemental prescription-drug insurance end up on the hook for thousands of dollars.

“There’s a groundswell of patients who are outraged,” says Jerry Flanagan, health-care policy director for the Foundation for Taxpayer & Consumer Rights, a Los Angeles watchdog group.

Full story at Wall Street Journal: Wary of Backlash, Cancer-Drug Makers Weigh Price Limits
By JOHN CARREYROU and GEETA ANAND
May 10, 2006; Page B1
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Fatty acid oxidation in prostate cancer

» 09 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » Comments Off

Men treated for prostate cancer or hoping to prevent the disease are increasingly made aware of the possible roles of certain dietary fats in fueling the disease. Now a scientist at New Jersey Medical School has suggested that prostate cancer cells’ use of fatty acids could be made the basis for new imaging methods and new ways to treat the disease.

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Cuba Works on Prostate Cancer Vaccine

» 06 May 2006 » In Uncategorized » 1 Comment

Havana, May 5 (Prensa Latina) The Center of Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB) of Camaguey Province submitted a candidate vaccine to the National Medicine Control Center to begin clinical tests, part of its quest for a recombinant vaccine and therapy for prostate cancer.

Assistant Research Director Eulogio Pimentel said the CIGB is conducting research on several types of cancer, sometimes involving joint work with other institutions, such as the Molecular Immunology Center that has already developed similar projects for lung, breast, head, neck and prostate cancer.

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Nick DeWolf dies of stroke, prostate cancer

» 02 May 2006 » In Beam Radiation, Obits, Prostate Cancer, Proton » 1 Comment

Nicholas DeWolf, inventor, computer expert and philosopher, died Sunday April 12 in a hospital in Aspen, CO age 77 of complications from a stroke and prostate cancer.

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Nick DeWolfe obituary

» 02 May 2006 » In Beam Radiation, Obits, Prostate Cancer, Proton » Comments Off

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