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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: may be + cancer drug + sunitinib  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Biomarkers allow doctors to match therapy to patient
Genetic Engineering News (press release), NY - Apr 13, 2008
Our work provides novel data on a potential biomarker for the monitoring of anti-angiogenic drug activity in cancer patients, as well as identifies a cell ...
New Treatments Help Fight Liver, Colon Cancer
Forbes, NY - Apr 14, 2008
MONDAY, April 14 (HealthDay News) -- A new drug duo might help prevent colorectal cancer, and the powerful new cancer drug Sutent may slow the progression ...
Drug may help treat liver cancer
Irish Health, Ireland - Apr 15, 2008
?Patients with this type of cancer have a very poor prognosis. This study shows that we may be able to effectively use sunitinib with manageable ...
Updates in the Management of Prostate and Kidney Cancers
Cancer Consultants, ID - May 6, 2008
Because this was a retrospective analysis including a small number of patients, the true incidence of heart failure associated with sunitinib may be greater ...
Spirit of science and democracy
Malaysia Star, Malaysia - Apr 26, 2008
During the conference, 500 of us oncologists discussed five drugs commonly used in MRCC viz. sunitinib, sorafenib, bevacizumab, interferon-alpha and ...
Sunitinib Slows Tumour Growth and Spread of Advanced Liver Cancer ...
DG News - Apr 21, 2008
By Sophie Bainbridge SAN DIEGO -- April 21, 2008 -- The oral small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor sunitinib may be a therapy option for patients with ...
Suicide of terminally ill man refused drugs
Eastbourne Today, UK - Apr 27, 2008
... said his friend was 'happy-go-lucky' and 'very clever' but explained he had become depressed after being refused a new cancer drug, called Sunitinib, ...
AACR: Potential Markers of Response to Antiangiogenic Therapy ...
MedPage Today, NJ - Apr 14, 2008
The study involved 23 patients with renal cell cancer treated with sunitinib and 19 patients with non-small-cell lung cancer treated with bevacizumab plus ...
Advances In Targeted Therapy And Tissue Engineering In Urology
Medical News Today (press release), UK - Apr 18, 2008
Sorafenib and sunitinib are "multikinase" inhibitors that target several kinases to include KIT, FLT3, PDGF and VEGF receptors. ...
Biomarkers that may enable doctors to monitor cancer treatment ...
DailyIndia.com, FL - Apr 14, 2008
"Our work provides novel data on a potential biomarker for the monitoring of anti-angiogenic drug activity in cancer patients, as well as identifies a cell ...
Source: Google News

Antiangiogenic Therapy: A Universal Chemosensitization Strategy for Cancer? -
RS Kerbel - Science, 2006 - sciencemag.org
... on the mechanisms by which these drugs assist one ... efficacy of the combination therapies
and may increase their ... the costs of many targeted cancer drugs can be ...

… Activity of SU11248, a Novel Oral Multitarget Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor, in Patients With Cancer -
S Faivre, C Delbaldo, K Vera, C Robert, S Lozahic, … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2006 - jco.ascopubs.org
... Future studies may consider including prospective imaging ... was graded using the National
Cancer Institute Common ... Drug Administration Sunitinib was supplied as ...

Drug discovery: playing dirty -
S Frantz - Nature, 2005 - nature.com
... In August, Pfizer submitted a cancer drug called Sutent (sunitinib ... many genes one
at a time may have limited ... likely candidate for a multi-target drug will be ...

Hypothyroidism after Sunitinib Treatment for Patients with Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors -
J Desai, L Yassa, E Marqusee, S George, MC Frates, … - Annals of Internal Medicine, 2006 - Am Coll Physicians
... function is warranted in patients receiving the drug. ... in some patients suggest that
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Sunitinib malate for the treatment of solid tumours: a review of current clinical data -
RJ Motzer, S Hoosen, CL Bello, JG Christensen - Expert Opin. Investig. Drugs, 2006 - Expert Opinion
... on sunitinib in the first-line setting may provide a ... 7K), Figure 1. Chemical structure
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Food and Drug Administration Drug Approval Summary: Sunitinib Malate for the Treatment of … -
EP Rock, V Goodman, JX Jiang, K Mahjoob, SL … - The Oncologist, 2007 - AlphaMed Press
... of action of the newly approved targeted cancer drug sunitinib. ... Such subclinical
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Validating cancer drug targets -
JD Benson, YNP Chen, SA Cornell-Kennon, M Dorsch, … - Nature, 2006 - nature.com
... doi :10.1038/nature04873; Published online 24 May 2006. ... as sorafenib (Nexavar) and
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Sunitinib Induces Hypothyroidism in Advanced Cancer Patients and May Inhibit Thyroid Peroxidase … -
E Wong, LS Rosen, M Mulay, A VanVugt, M Dinolfo, C … - Thyroid, 2007 - liebertonline.com
... Patients and May Inhibit Thyroid Peroxidase Activity ... Fatigue is often observed in
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Sorafenib and Sunitinib in the Treatment of Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer -
C Gridelli, P Maione, F Del Gaizo, G Colantuoni, C … - The Oncologist, 2007 - AlphaMed Press
... Future drug development should focus on somewhat lessening ... than inhibiting a single
pathway in cancer therapies and ... to date suggest that they may also play a ...

[PDF] Mechanisms of disease: oncogene addiction?a rationale for molecular targeting in cancer therapy -
IB Weinstein, AK Joe - Nat Clin Pract Oncol, 2006 - nature.com
... normally performs a similar function.A drug that inhibits ... cells, pairs of genes in
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Source: Google Scholar

Another 'smart' cancer drug can have toxic effects on the heart

 

Oncologists should monitor sunitinib patients closely, particularly if they have history of coronary disease or develop hypertension

Another FDA-approved targeted cancer drug, sunitinib (SutentTM, Pfizer), may be associated with cardiac toxicity, report researchers at Children’s Hospital Boston, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Boston), and Thomas Jefferson University (Philadelphia). Their collaborative study, led by Ming Hui Chen, MD, MMSc, a cardiologist at Children’s who specializes in the cardiac health of cancer patients, appears in the December 15 issue of The Lancet, accompanied by an editorial.

Sunitinib is one of several new “smart” cancer drugs called tyrosine kinase inhibitors that targets specific signaling molecules inside cancer cells that aid cancer spread. Another “targeted” cancer therapy, imatinib (GleevecTM, Novartis Pharmaceuticals), was reported last year in Nature Medicine to be associated with heart failure in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia.

Sunitinib was originally thought to be relatively free of cardiac side effects. However, a new retrospective analysis, focused on cardiovascular events, revealed a risk for heart failure, myocardial infarction and hypertension in 75 adult patients with imatinib-resistant, gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) receiving multiple cycles of sunitinib in a phase I/II trial at Dana-Farber.

Of the 75, six (8 percent) developed symptoms consistent with moderate-to-severe congestive heart failure, and two had heart attacks. In all, eight (11 percent) had some kind of cardiovascular event while receiving sunitinib at FDA-approved or lower doses. Patients with preexisting coronary artery disease were more likely to develop cardiac problems. Nineteen percent of the 36 patients receiving the FDA-approved dose had decreases in left ventricular ejection fraction, a measure of the heart’s pumping ability.

In addition, 47 percent (35 of 75) developed hypertension. “Hypertension is a common side effect with certain cancer drugs, but the degree of hypertension – both the percentage of affected patients and the magnitude of increase in systolic blood-pressure – was notable,” says Chen, who is also affiliated with Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School.

Two patient biopsies revealed abnormalities in the heart cells’ mitochondria (the structures responsible for energy production). Further studies, led by Maria Rupnick, MD, of the Children’s Hospital Boston Vascular Biology Program, and Thomas Force, MD, from the Center for Translational Medicine and Division of Cardiology at Jefferson, examined heart-muscle cells from mice who had received the equivalent of a human dosage of sunitinib alone, and found direct evidence of cardiotoxicity.

“Early identification of cardiac side effects is an important part of keeping patients on life-saving cancer therapy over the long-term,” says Chen. “In this study, the cardiac dysfunction and hypertension were usually medically manageable. Most importantly, patients were most often able to resume sunitinib therapy following temporary withholding of drug, addition of cardiac medications and/or dose adjustment.”

“This sunitinib study highlights potential concerns with agents that are ‘multi-targeted,’ meaning they inhibit multiple factors involved in cancer progression,” adds Force, who led the study of imatinib patients published in Nature Medicine last year. “Some of these factors may also play important roles in maintenance of proper heart function, and their inhibition by cancer drugs could have adverse effects on the heart.”

“The most important element of this new work is the close, creative collaboration between our medical oncology and cardiology teams,” says George Demetri, MD, a co-author on the paper and director of the Ludwig Center at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School. “As our molecular targeting involves more pathways, we can inform one another’s fields and identify side effects early by working together across traditional disciplinary boundaries.”

“We are hopeful,” Chen concludes, “that this type of multidisciplinary approach, from the patient’s bedside to the basic cell biology laboratory, will lead to further pharmaceutical advances that will make these ‘smart’ cancer drugs even smarter.”

Children’s has a long history of researching the cardiovascular effects of cancer drugs. In children, such side effects are especially important to manage so they can survive the cancer in good health well into adulthood. In 1991, for example, Children’s cardiologists published the seminal finding that doxorubicin therapy for childhood leukemia can lead to clinically important heart disease.

###

Supporters of the sunitinib cardiovascular study included the Department of Cardiology, Children’s Hospital Boston; the Translational Research Fund for Cancer and Cardiology at Children’s Hospital Boston; a Long-Term Survivorship Grant from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute; the Finnish Heart Foundation; and the American Heart Association.

Children’s Hospital Boston is home to the world’s largest research enterprise based at a pediatric medical center, where its discoveries have benefited both children and adults since 1869. More than 500 scientists, including eight members of the National Academy of Sciences, 11 members of the Institute of Medicine and 12 members of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute comprise Children’s research community. Founded as a 20-bed hospital for children, Children’s Hospital Boston today is a 377-bed comprehensive center for pediatric and adolescent health care grounded in the values of excellence in patient care and sensitivity to the complex needs and diversity of children and families. Children’s also is the primary pediatric teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School. For more information about the hospital and its research visit: www.childrenshospital.org/newsroom.

 
 
 
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