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By: Rebecca
Viksnins Snowden
This
week the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved ofatumumab
(Arzerra) for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) that
is not responding to fludarabine (Fludara) or alemtuzumab (Campath).
The drug, made by GlaxoSmithKline and Genmab, was given fast-track
approval, meaning the companies must conduct more studies to prove the
drug is effective.
CLL accounts for about
one-third of all leukemias. Leukemias are cancers of white blood cells
that start in the bone marrow and can spread to other parts of the body
such as the spleen, lymph nodes, and liver. Compared to other types of
leukemia, CLL usually grows slowly.
Treatment options vary,
depending on whether CLL is causing any symptoms and the history of the
patient. Many CLL patients who have already been treated with the
chemotherapy drug fludarabine try alemtuzumab, a monoclonal antibody
that can help their immune system destroy cancer cells, as a
second-line treatment.
Ofatumumab is also a monoclonal
antibody that helps stimulate the immune system to fight cancer cells.
It works by binding to a specific protein found on both normal and
malignant B cells (B cells are a type of white blood cell).
The FDA's approval of
ofatumumab was based on encouraging results from a single-arm (in other
words, all the patients got the same treatment) study of 59 patients
whose CLL had come back or not responded to other treatments. Forty-two
percent of the patients responded to ofatumumab. The average response
time was 6.5 months. The drug's safety was also evaluated in a group of
181 CLL patients.
Common side effects included a
decrease in normal white blood cells, pneumonia, fever, cough,
diarrhea, lower red blood cell counts, fatigue, shortness of breath,
rash, nausea, bronchitis, and upper respiratory tract infections. The
most serious side effect was an increased chance of infections,
including some that could be life-threatening.
GlaxoSmithKline plans
additional studies of the drug, which may be available by prescription
within the next month.
Click here to read the FDA's
press release. For more information about CLL, click here.
Reviewed
by:
Members
of the ACS
Medical Content Staff
ACS News Center stories are provided as a source of cancer-related
news and are not intended to be used as
press releases.
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