Cancer drug helps arthritis — study
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Genentech Inc. and Biogen Idec
Inc.’s cancer drug Rituxan improved symptoms of rheumatoid
arthritis in patients not helped by drugs designed to block an
inflammation-causing protein, researchers said on Sunday.
Rituxan, currently sold as a treatment for non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, improved arthritis symptoms by at least 20 percent in
51 percent of patients who took the drug, compared with 18
percent of patients who took a placebo, according to results
from the six-month study.
The trial followed 520 patients who had not responded
adequately to methotrexate and drugs such as Amgen Inc.’s
Enbrel and Abbott Laboratories’ Humira that inhibit a protein
called tumor necrosis factor.
Twenty-seven percent of Rituxan patients achieved a 50
percent improvement in symptoms, compared with 5 percent on the
placebo, while 12 percent achieved a 70 percent improvement,
compared with 1 percent of placebo patients.
The full study results will be presented on Wednesday in
San Diego at a meeting of the American College of Rheumatology.
Anti-TNF therapies are often successful in reducing joint
inflammation in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, but for
some patients it is not enough.
“While TNF blockers are an extremely beneficial therapy,
there are patients who fail to respond or have toxicity to
these therapies,” Dr. Stanley Cohen, of Radiant Research in
Dallas, Texas, and an investigator in the study, said in a
statement.
“For those patients, adding rituximab (Rituxan) to the
treatment management plan may spell the difference in success.”
Researchers said the most common adverse effects seen in
the trial were infusion-related and easily managed.
Genentech, which is majority owned by Roche Holding AG, and
Biogen-Idec filed last month for U.S. regulatory approval to
market Rituxan as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis.
