FDA approves new first line treatment option for metastatic pancreatic
This news today from pancan.org and FDA
https://pancan.org/news/fda-approves-new-first-line-treatment-option-for-metastatic-pancreatic-cancer-what-you-need-to-know/
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Thanks for be excellent summary! Kudos to your drs for allowing you to go beyond the standard level of care; mine wouldn’t agree to that. Just curious, did you develop the neuropathy often associated with FFX? - and how often do you get scanned and I take it you no longer receive any chemo? Also, if you don’t mind sharing, what pancreatic-related mutations did they identify? I have the KRAS12-D, atm base variant, and TP53. Wonderful that you are cancer free now, gives us all hope!
Hello @robee I too am trying to push through because I like to keep busy also. Being on chemo with pancreatitis, impressive! I got that as a side effect after my surgery and the pain was incredible! I have my own tiny environmental consulting business and have site visits about 1 hour away in driving time. My daughter is following in my major of environmental science and is my intern 1-2 days per week so she drives me to the sites. My son has been responsible for most of my at-home medical care and drives me the other days as I would have the strength to make the drives and do my monitoring. I only work up to 3 days per week up to 5 hours a day if you I’m include the report writing. I’m also on the Bolsa Chica Land Trust Board which is a pretty active group, but I love being involved in that! Some people say I should be resting, and my response is something irrevent like I’ll rest when the old ticker stops. Good luck to you as I’m seeing more and more outliers since 24 years ago when my dad was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.
Here is a reason why the NAPOLi trial was done comparing Nalirifox to Gemzar/Abraxane first and not to Folfirinox. The first goal of a clinical trial is to prove an investigational new drug or drug combo (IND) is more effective then a currently approved drug. If it is, it gets approval-if not, then it doesn’t unless it shows it is at least equivlent in effectiveness with less side effects and adverse reactions are of a lower grade than the drug or regimen it is compared against.
If Nalirifox was first compared to Folfirinox and found it was not better, then it wouldn’t receive approval. However, if it was proved first that Nalirifox outperformed G/A in a number of metrics and side effects and adverse events were better, it could be approved and patients could begin gaining benefit. Now the next step is in a comparison with Folfirinox to see if is better. Some of those questions might already be answered looking at the Waterfall plots and Meier-Kaplan data and other statistical metrics in comparing with G/A. Those same metrics already exist between Folfirinox and G/A and can be interpreted as to whether study is warranted now between Nalirifox and Folfirinox.
With respect to efficacy of Oxaliplatin and cis-platin, there were comparison studies done more than a decade ago comparing the two. Oxaliplatin was found to be more effective in providing more overall survival and progression free survival but does have more neurotoxicity. Between 30-35% of treatment cohorts respond to either Folfirinox or Gemzar/Abraxane. It could just as well have been that you did not respond to 5-FU and not the Oxaliplatin.
I totally agree on the impossibility of attributing my response (or lack of) to the individual drugs in FFX vs GAC when I've only taken both as the whole cocktail. I've tried (not too hard) to arrange for sensitivity testing but run into more roadblocks than I have time to deal with presently. I will resume that process closer to my next tissue sample.
As a well-controlled experiment, we could (hypothetically) replace the Cisplatin in my GAC with Oxaliplatin, but that's never going to happen because of the increased neuropathy. On the other hand, I should be able to try "FolfiriCis" as a "less toxic" version of Folfirinox, but it doesn't appear to offer much return for the investment in my journey.
I appreciate that we consider side effect profiles as well as disease response in the drug approvals. Oxaliplatin vs Cisplatin vs Carboplatin is a classic example trading off one for the other.
As for the Nalirifox, comparing against G+A still strikes me as time wasted just to get in the door by setting the bar low. We now have 10+ years of data comparing FFX vs GA. My (very undereducated) opinion is that a head-to-head comparison of Nalirifox vs Folfirinox could have already reached conclusions by now about the effectiveness vs side effect tradeoffs of the two (better/same/worse for each criteria), providing doctors that data now rather than a couple years in the future.
Without the head-to-head comparison (and approval without it), how would a doctor decide whether to treat a newly diagnosed patient with one vs the other?
Thanks for your very detailed and helpful reply. The newer formulation is better tolerated as I understand it. After my first round of chemo with Folfirinox I thought I would rather die than take it again. Because of the BRCA1 gene, I wanted to continue with a platinum drug and was treated with Folfox. I did fine with this treatment. I went from borderline to operable and there was no evidence of active tumor in anything when I had my Whipple. My sister, who has squamous cell esophageal cancer , was tried first with a platinum combination. She showed a response and then failed. She is now getting modified liposomal irinotecan and her side effects have been pretty mild. Individual responses to treatment vary and so do side effects.
I asked my oncologist about Nalirifox today. He said he doesn't think the study blazed any new territory, that all the drugs had already been approved. He said that the Nalirifox drug combo didn't offer any new benefits to patients. Indeed, he added that in his experience, the liposomal irinotecan is more toxic than regular irinotecan (he said at this cancer center, they had found that dosage had to be reduced in order to reduce the side effects) and is "7 times" more expensive than regular irinotecan. (He didn't cite dollar figures to support that.) So when I asked whether it was something we should consider using in my Folfiri regimen, I already knew his answer, and indeed, he said no. I am not an MD, and we all know that every MD has their own insights and opinions on, well, just about everything involving pancan. So take what I've mentioned here with many grains of salt. But as for me, I'm staying on my modified Folfiri regimen using regular irinotecan.