FDA aims to give more cancer patients a chance to try experimental treatments

Announces plans at Chicago conference to make drugs available that show promise but aren’t on the market yet.

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A few days after Sally Atwater left a hospital. her doctor spent two months on calls, messages and dozens of pages of forms to get her an experimental drug he thinks can fight the lung cancer that has spread to her brain and spine.

A few days after Sally Atwater left a hospital. her doctor spent two months on calls, messages and dozens of pages of forms to get her an experimental drug he thinks can fight the lung cancer that has spread to her brain and spine.

Ashley Atwater via AP

Sally Atwater’s doctor spent two months on calls, messages and paperwork to get her an experimental drug he thinks can fight the lung cancer that has spread to her brain and spine.

Nancy Goodman begged eight companies to let her young son try experimental medicines for a brain tumor that ultimately killed him, and “only three of the companies even gave me a reason why they declined,” she said.

Thousands of gravely ill cancer patients every year year seek “compassionate use” access to treatments that are not yet on the market but have shown promise in early testing and aren’t available to them through a study.

Now, the government wants to make this easier and give more heft to the requests. On Monday, at the world’s largest cancer conference, held in Chicago at McCormick Place, the federal Food and Drug Administration announced a project to have the agency become the middleman.

Instead of making doctors plead their case first to companies and then to the FDA if the company agrees to provide the drug, the FDA will become the initial step and will assign a staffer to quickly do the paperwork. That way, when a company gets a request, it knows the federal drug-oversight agency already considers it appropriate.

“We are here to help. We are not here to make a drug company give a specific drug to a patient. We don’t have that authority,” said Dr. Richard Pazdur, the FDA official leading the effort.

But the agency gets little information now on how many requests are turned down and why.

The current system also is cumbersome and sometimes unfair, he said. Patients in inner cities or rural areas or at community hospitals that lack staff to work on special requests might be disadvantaged. Social media campaigns can add to the inequity.

“We do not want to have the situation where somebody who screams loudest gets the drug” and other worthy candidates don’t, Pazdur said.

The project involves only drugs for cancer, not other diseases. It has nothing to do with the federal Right to Try law passed last year, which many have called “right to ask” because it allows patients only to request a drug from a company under certain circumstances and does not mandate that it be provided.

The new FDA project is “absolutely going to change things” and push more companies to say yes, Goodman said. She founded the Kids v Cancer advocacy group after her 10-year-old son Jacob Froman died in 2009.

The FDA has not been the problem, according to Goodman. It keeps a website with links to companies’ policies and contact information for patients and has quickly approved the vast majority of these requests whenever a company has granted access.

That’s what happened when Dr. Chul Kim, a lung specialist at Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, made his first attempt to get compassionate use for a patient, in this case to help Atwater, whose cancer was spreading despite usual treatments.

“I felt there was an urgent need to switch therapy,” and early results suggested the experimental drug could get into the brain, which many therapies can’t do, and fight the cancer there, Kim said.

He started the process in early February and ultimately got Atwater the drug in late March.

“I have other patients, and I needed to carve out time for this” and was fortunate to have staff who’d been working with the company on a study who could help, Kim said. Once the company agreed, it took the FDA only a day to do the same.

“It requires quite a bit of work,” usually at least 24 hours over several weeks, said Dr. Ajai Chari at Mount Sinai’s Tisch Cancer Institute in New York, where dozens of people have gotten compassionate use access over the past decade. “A lot of people have to drop what they’re doing to get all that done.”Chari just did it for Michael Walsh, a 58-year-old musician from New York City, who has had myeloma since 2011.

“He’s exhausted all approved FDA therapies,” including 13 types of chemotherapy, Chari said.

Within a few weeks of starting on the experimental drug, Walsh had a dramatic reduction in his cancer.

“I’m working, doing things,” Walsh said. “It is giving me some space to have the cancer be under control.”

Atwater, the 68-year-old Washington woman treated at Georgetown, is hoping for the same from her experimental drug. She said she asked her sister who had breast cancer how she might be able to tell if the treatment was working.

“She said, ‘You’re still here, aren’t you?’ ” Atwater said. “I think it’s worth the risk. At least, I hope it is.”

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