Tag Archives: Leukaemia

EMA Concept Paper on the Evaluation of AntiCancer Medicinal Products

EMA Concept Paper on the Evaluation of AntiCancer Medicinal Products.

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The current revision 3 of the Notes for Guidance “EVALUATION OF ANTICANCER MEDICINAL PRODUCTS IN MAN” came into operation in 2006 and was followed by an appendix covering methodological issues related to Progression-free Survival and finally in 2010 an appendix on Haematological Malignancies. In addition a paediatric appendix was released in 2003.
The main text and the appendices are partly over-lapping and, e.g. some issues covered in the haematology appendix are of relevance also for the main text. There is thus a need to revise the main text and to incorporate elements of the appendices in order to provide more comprehensive and harmonised guidance documents. Furthermore, the methodology and paediatric appendices also need some revision. In addition the increase in tumour immunotherapies having entered advanced stages of clinical development and requiring specific methodology needs to be considered.

About one third of new chemical or biological entities under clinical development are aimed for the treatment of malignancies. This both reflects the need for improved treatment and a deeper understanding of the biology of tumours. The diversity of mechanistically different treatment modalities may need a more judicious approach with respect to inclusion criteria and end points for exploratory as well as confirmatory studies. Thus, in addition to the aim to harmonise the main document and its appendices, it is foreseen that an update is needed on certain specific topics related to drug development as further discussed below.

There is a common understanding that for treatment to be effective, whether “targeted” or not, drug development should aim at identifying patients with an increased likelihood to respond favourably to treatment. While this is the case and has been so for a long time, in practice medicinal compounds are still developed without this being an integrated part of the drug development from drug discovery, throughout non-clinical and clinical development.
There is an obvious and understood wish to use serum biomarkers in order to try to define the proper patients for therapy. However, it is foreseen that tumour biopsies also within a foreseeable future will play a central role in identifying target expression, etc. As rarely it will be possible to achieve complete sampling and valid analyses, this merits a discussion about missing data, use of data derived from several independent studies, etc.
For classical cytotoxic compounds there has often been a foreseeable relationship between response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS) and survival (OS). This appears less frequently to be the case for so called targeted compounds. PFS is also a composite endpoint: new lesions, increased size of existing lesions and death. To what extent this pattern may differ comparing classes of compounds is not well understood. Other topics related to PFS are the use of independent review and the weight that should be put on investigator’s assessment and also to what extent the meaning of “progression” might differ in relation to prior/ongoing therapy.
The use of PFS or OS as primary endpoints will also be re-discussed taking elements from the haematology appendix into account, as well as the problems to conduct last-line studies in a competitive environment without accepting cross-over.

Tumour “vaccines” and other immune therapy approaches are rather sparsely covered in the current guideline and may need further development.
There is also a perceived need to expand the section on disease specific guidance as well as the paragraph about quality of life/patient reported outcome. The current paediatric appendix is focused on early drug development. This is not considered satisfactory and it is foreseen that, e.g. the experience gained from paediatric investigation plans will provide incentives to revise this appendix.

If you need assistance planning an oncology development programme get in touch.

Damien Bové is THE Drug Development and Regulatory Consultant (pharmaceutical or biotechnology), I work with my clients to define a drug development target, define a drug development strategy, define a regulatory strategy or define a commercial strategy. Our clients are generally raising funds or looking to license out their technology and we help them achieve it. If you want to know more don’t hesitate to get in touch.

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Leukaemia – 60 years of progress – its what we work for.

I have just returned from most engaging presentation being held at the Nowgen centre in Manchester, the meeting entitled Leukaemia 60 years of Progress was a look a the progress we have made in treating Leukaemia in the past 60 years and I found it a massive boost to my moral and why I was attracted to working in this industry in the first place.

The Presentation was made by Dr Emm Barnes and Professor Tony Whetton, as part of the Our Kid Medical Manchester celebrations.

The story starts with a staggering fact, in 1948 the survival time from diagnosis to death was 3 days. But in 1948 a Dr Sydney Farber reported the first ever remissions from drug therapy in in the New England Journal Of Medicine, this is considered the birth of modern anti-cancer drug therapy.

The Medical Research Council were quick to support British Researchers such as Henry Basil Marsden from Manchester, in taking up and researching these new technologies, and Edith Paterson so set up the worlds first cancer registry a lead that remains in place today.

Childhood Leukaemia has always being a disease that has attracted alot of attention, the reason for this is clear, following on from the nuclear bombs benign dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima, there saw a massive increase in the incidence of Leukaemia in the local child population that survived the initial attacks. There was general fear that the increased use of Nuclear power and weapons discharging radiation into the atmosphere that there would be a huge upsurge in Childhood Leukaemia globally.  Also at this time there was an upsurge in diagnosis of the condition, following improvements in Antibiotic therapies meaning that children were surviving infections and the underlying condition was then being diagnosed.

In the 1960′s and 1970′s the first specialist services for children with cancer were rolled out in the NHS, after a decade of research demonstrated that children who were in specialist centers survived 2.5 times longer.

In the 1970′s the survival in childhood leukaemia stopped being reported in time and started being recorded in percentages, this was a significant milestone in the treatment of this disease, as 50%  has a chance of survival. Issues of long term care started to become important, such as social stigma, employment and insurance problems.

1980′s there was still no standard treatment, (there is still no standard today) but all patients were treated in what is basicaly an ongoing clinical trial, with enrolment being at 80 to 90%, we are currentley at stages 14 of this ongoing programme.

1990′s there were leaps forward in survival and masses of progress in reduced side effects. Gleevec was discovered and developed.

2000′s it has now being discovered that there are 100 different genetic mutations that cause leukaemia, so it is 1 disease of 100 diseases with common symptoms, these are the questions that are facing researchers now and the progress of personalised medicine is starting to define how research will move forward in the future. Gleevec was also launched in 2001, this drug revolutionised therapy, however it is not a cure but a treatment and as with antibiotic therapy we are now starting to see patients develop gleevec resistant leukaemia.

In summary in 60 years of medical research we have gone from a survival time of three days to stage where patients are held in remission almost indefinitely, in this most complex genetic disease.

Damien Bové works as a drug development consultant (pharmaceutical or biotechnology), we work with our clients to define a development target, define a development strategy, define a regulatory strategy or define a commercial strategy. Our clients are generally raising funds or looking to license out their technology and we help them achieve it. If you want to know more don’t hesitate to get in touch using the contact form or email Damien at damien.bove@idaconsultants.com