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Old 01-24-2010, 07:04 PM   #1
Rich66
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Nexavar (Sorafenib) off label?

Anyone getting coverage for Nexavar outside of a trial? As a drug known to be effective for primary liver cancer, seems to synergize with both Xeloda and Femara. Would think it a good combination good for ER+ liver mets.
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Old 01-27-2010, 12:13 PM   #2
gdpawel
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Re: Nexavar (Sorafenib) off label?

Nexavar is already appoved in more than 60 countries as a kidney cancer treatment. But the tablets are the first systemic therapy for liver cancer. Marketed by Onyx, it reported profits on the strength of off-label sales of Nexavar for liver cancer. That was based largely on data that Onyx reported that said Nexavar extended the life of patients in a clinical trial three months longer than for those on a placebo.

Direct anti-tumor and anti-vascular effects were studied of Tykerb, Nexavar and Avastin in fresh biopsy specimens of breast cancer and presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology Breast Cancer Symposium on September 5, 2008.

While the other clinically-available 'nib' drugs have been shown to have anti-vascular activity, anti-vascular activity of Tykerb has not been previously reported.

Angiogenesis studies are limited by the clinical relevance of laboratory model systems. They don't do "real world" studies under "real world" conditions. Patient outcomes need to be reported in real-time, so patients and cancer physicians can learn immediately if and how patients are benefiting from new drug therapies.

Cell culture detection of microvascular cell death in clinical specimens of human neoplasms and peripheral blood can identify the activity of both single drugs and combinations of drugs at the level of individual patients with individual cancers. It works by measuring drug effects (real-time) upon endothelial cells which make up blood vessels.

Drugs like Avastin had striking anti-microvascular effects but minimal anti-tumor effects. Tarceva and Gleevec had mixed antitumor and anti-microvascular effects. Anti-microvascular effects of Tarceva and Iressa were equal to those of Sutent and Nexavar. Anti-microvascular additivity was observed between Avastin and other drugs on an individual basis.

Conclusions of the study had shown that Tykerb has antivascular activity superior to that of Nexavar. Avastin + Tykerb may be the first clinically-exploitable antivascular drug combination. High dose, intermittent 'bolus' schedules of Tykerb to coincide with Avastin administration may be clinically advantageous, even in HER2-negative tumors.

The system utilized for the study was a functional profiling assay, which may be used to individualize antivascular therapy. It can be adapted for simple, inexpensive and sensitive/specific detection of tissue and circulating microvascular cells in a variety of neoplastic and non-neoplastic conditions, for drug development, and individualized cancer treatment.

It can accurately sort drugs into categories of above average probability of providing clinical benefit on one hand and below average probability of providing clinical benefit on the other hand, based both on tumor response and patient survival.

It has been very routine and well-accepted practice to prescribe drugs in cancer types and disease stages outside of those in which the drugs originally received FDA approval. Generally, insurance companies have paid for drugs used outside of FDA-approved settings because the treating physician finds their use in those instances to be "medically necessary."

I would think that having additional support of drug patient-specific activity as determined by extensive laboratory pre-tests could very well bolster an argument to the insurance company in seeking payment for treatments.
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