DrugManagementForum.com

Is the bar set too low for new cancer drugs?

This is a discussion on Is the bar set too low for new cancer drugs? within the Biotechnology News forum, part of the Industry News and Updates category; In an attempt to illustrate just how hard it is to treat cancer, New York Times' biotech scribe Andrew Pollack ...


Go Back   DrugManagementForum.com > Industry News and Updates > Biotechnology News

Register Help Members List Mark Forums Read

Rate This Thread - Is the bar set too low for new cancer drugs?.

Only registered members can vote. To rate this thread register here.

Reply

 

Thread Tools
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 09-02-2009, 10:49 AM
automated news aggregator
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,083
Default Is the bar set too low for new cancer drugs?

In an attempt to illustrate just how hard it is to treat cancer, New York Times' biotech scribe Andrew Pollack turns to an analogy that most of his hometown readers can relate to instantly. "There are so many aberrant molecules in a tumor," he writes, "that blocking just one or two is like trying to stop all traffic in Manhattan with a roadblock at a single intersection."
But that hasn't stopped cancer from becoming the hot spot in drug development. If anything, the intricate cancer grid is attracting a growing number of would-be traffic cops. According to the statisticians at PhRMA, there are now 860 cancer drugs in clinical trials, and Pollack notes that that is twice the number of experimental therapies for heart disease and stroke combined.
The incredible complexity of cancer is one reason for the explosion of new drugs. The disease has to be attacked along a variety of pathways in order to have any significant effect. That creates plenty of drug targets for developers. The FDA has proven willing to approve new oncology drugs based on marginal, often tiny, gains in survival rates. But money has a lot to do with it as well. Cancer patients have proven quite willing to pay large sums every month for treatments, and insurers are often unwilling to endure the backlash that any reimbursement denials would earn. That's one reason why 20 of the world's 126 blockbuster therapies are for cancer.
Cancer's popularity in the development world, though, is also generating a backlash from experts who believe that setting the bar too low for drug developers is now preventing researchers from concentrating their efforts where it would do the most good.
- read the article from the New York Times
Related Articles:
Study: New cancer drugs slowed by FDA demands
Feds double money for cancer research
More cancer meds hitting the market
Cancer groups compete for research funds


More...
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes


Similar Threads

Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Time to Consider Cost in Evaluating Cancer Drugs in United States? industry_news Other Clinical Pharmacy News 0 07-14-2009 01:23 PM
Pfizer plans dramatic increase in new cancer drugs industry_news Biotechnology News 0 07-14-2009 12:48 PM
Compendia Guiding Off-Label Use of Cancer Drugs Inadequate industry_news Other Clinical Pharmacy News 0 02-21-2009 11:13 AM
UK Cancer Experts Deplore NICE Decision on Kidney Cancer Drugs industry_news Other Clinical Pharmacy News 0 08-26-2008 09:00 PM


© 2008 DrugManagementForumpowered by
Informaceutica - Drug Management Information Company

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:55 PM.