Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor Treatment Does Not Increase Cancer Risk In RAPpatients
Posted on: Thursday, 29 October 2009, 14:32 CDT
Overall cancer risk comparable to those not taking immunosuppressive drugs
A recent study by Swedish researchers found that rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients did not experience an elevated cancer risk in the first 6 years after starting anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) therapy. The research team, led by Johan Askling, M.D., Ph.D., from Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden assessed the short-term and medium-term cancer risk for RA patients using anti-TNF therapies: infliximab, adalimumab, and etanercept. Details of the study appear in the November issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism, a journal of the American College of Rheumatology published by Wiley-Blackwell.
TNF is a cytokine (substance secreted by immune system cells) that regulates the body's immune system and is involved in inflammation. TNF inhibitors (or TNF blockers) are a class of therapies used to reduce inflammation in chronic inflammation such as RA. The common immunosuppressant drugs and those included in the study are Remicade®, HumiraTM, and Enbrel®. As these therapies are used to treat chronic inflammatory illnesses, the long-term inhibition of TNF raises concerns for increased risk of infections and cancer.
This study, one of the largest and longest population-based assessments of cancer risks associated with immunosuppressive therapy, included data from several Swedish databases including the Biologics Register, the Cancer Register, and the Early RA Register. Researchers identified and analyzed data from 6,366 patients who started anti-TNF therapy between January 1999 and July 2006. Data from patients using TNF inhibitors was compared with other groups of RA patients—61,160 not taking medication, 4015 using methotrexate (the gold standard in RA treatment) and 4,015 taking combinations of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (other than TNF inhibitors).
Results show there were 240 first primary cancers diagnosed during the 25,693 person-years of follow-up in the patients using anti-TNF therapy who had no history of cancer at the onset of immunosuppressant treatment. When compared to the larger national RA cohort who did not receive TNF inhibitors or have a history of cancer, the relative risk of anti-TNF therapy was 1.00 and remained unchanged for those taking immunosuppressant drugs for up to 6 years. "Our research indicates the overall cancer risk is the same for RA patients on immunosuppressant therapies and those not taking medications for the disease," confirmed Dr. Askling, but adds that "given several remaining uncertainties, continued vigilance remains prudent."
---
On the Net:
Related Articles
- Preventative Brain Radiation For Lung Cancer Patients: Benefits And Risks
- Prostate Cancer Patients On Hormone Therapy At Risk For Various Heart Diseases
- Celator(R) Pharmaceuticals Study Shows Anti-Tumor Activity in Cancer Patients Treated With Therapy Based on Ratiometric Dosing
- Single-Agent SUTENT Prolonged Progression-Free Survival Across All Advanced Kidney Cancer Patient Risk Groups, Including Those With Poorest Prognoses, Data Show
- Geron's Telomerase Inhibitor Drug May Benefit Breast Cancer Patients Receiving Radiation Therapy
- New Hope For Prostate Cancer Patients Where Radiation Treatment Has Failed
- Long-term hormone use helps prostate cancer patients live longer
- Side Effects Trouble Breast Cancer Patients on Hormone Therapy
- Help for Cancer Patients Displaced By Hurricane Katrina; Radiation Oncologists Around the Country Open Their Doors to Gulf Coast Patients
- BioAlliance Pharma Announces Preliminary Phase III Data On Miconazole Lauriad Bioadhesive Buccal Tablets For Local Treatment of Oropharyngeal Candidiasis in Head and Neck Cancer Patients Following Radiation Therapy
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds